Class of 2024: Cap and gown pickups begin April 15 at the Harriman and Oak Ridge bookstores. Bookstore hours are 8am-4:30pm ET Monday-Thursday. Visit the commencement ceremony webpage for additional info.

Skip to Main Content
Menu
Roane State Community CollegeRoane State Community College

Roane State Community College

News
  1. RSCC HomeRSCC Home
  2. About Roane State
  3. Public Relations
  4. News
Move Forward. Don't delay your future! Apply now! Register for online or traditional classes.Move Forward. Don't delay your future! Apply now!. Register for online or traditional classes.
Tennessee Reconnect and Promise. Graduating high school seniors can attend tuition-free. Free tuition for adults.Tennessee Reconnect and Promise. Graduating high school seniors can attend tuition-free. Free tuition for adults.
Online degrees available. Online education gives you flexibility to take classes that fit your schedule.Online degrees available. Online education gives you flexibility to take classes that fit your schedule.

News: Lab-in-a-Box kits, training give teachers valuable resources

Dr. Mark Buckner, standing at right, a Roane State adjunct professor, gives educators some tips in assembling a robot during a Lab-in-a-Box workshop at the Pollard Technology Conference Center at Oak Ridge Associated Universities. Standing next to him is Oak Ridge High School student Connor Shelander, a member of the school’s FIRST Robotics Wildbots 4265 team. Seated, from left, are educators Kelli Hansen, James Davis and Jade Mason.

July 28, 2017

By Bob Fowler
Roane State staff writer

From deciphering the ancient stories in fossils, to the physics lessons in friction, to assembling and operating robots, area teachers now have the latest educational tools thanks to the Rural Communities STEM Initiative Lab-in-a-Box program.

Roane State Community College is deeply involved in the innovative “Lab-in-a-Box” program, which wrapped recently at the Pollard Technology Conference Center on the Oak Ridge Associated Universities (ORAU) campus in Oak Ridge.

It’s part of the Rural Communities STEM initiative (RCSI), which is a business-and-education partnership working with area school districts to provide hands-on learning tools in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) programs.

The nonprofit Roane State Foundation administers contributions from businesses, organizations and individuals for the programs, and Roane State professors have helped design several Lab-in-a-Box kits.

Developed in 2010, the Lab-in-a-Box program has won thumbs-up reviews from teachers for its earlier kits involving physical and earth sciences.

“The students are enthusiastic. The teachers are appreciative, and test scores have improved,” said Roane State Chemistry Professor Sylvia Pastor, who oversaw this summer’s workshops.

In the first rollout of this summer’s Lab-in-a-Boxes, middle school teachers on June 30 switched roles with students to learn the intricacies of assembling and operating 1,000-plus piece robots.

Helping the educators were five members of the award-winning FIRST Robotics Secret City Wildbots 4265 team at Oak Ridge High School. Roane State adjunct professor Dr. Mark Buckner, a researcher at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, is the team mentor. He said the high school students designed the robotics Lab-in-a-Box.

“Rural schools often have little funding and supplies, and this is an opportunity to get resources to my students,” said Susie Brown, a science teacher at Lenoir City Intermediate Middle School. She and other educators were given computer tablets containing step-by-step photo instructions for assembling the robots.

Clinton Middle School teacher Kelli Hansen noted that many careers now – and even more so in the future – are in technology and robotics. “We want them (students) to have experiences in technology and not be fearful of it,” she said.

With fossils on the desk in front of them, Roane County educators Jennifer Mynatt, left, of Cherokee Middle School, and Harriman Middle School teacher Tori Henley study manuals during the July 14 workshop on Roane State’s Lab-in-a-Box program. The workshop was held at the Pollard Technology Conference Center at Oak Ridge Associated Universities.

Roane State Geology Professor Arthur Lee led area educators through the July 14 “Lab-in-a-Box” about the ancient history of extinct plants and animals contained within fossils. Teachers received two dozen fossils, a guidebook and other handouts to help their students uncover the past.

“I think this is fantastic,” Harriman Middle School teacher Tori Henley said.

It’s also an inexpensive way for her to increase her educational toolbox, she added.

The final Lab-in-a-Box rollout this summer is titled “Frictional Forces.” Phillip Hyun, Roane State assistant physics professor, guided area teachers in using the weights, balances and digital scales contained within the large translucent boxes.

Phillip Hyun, Roane State assistant professor of physics, mathematics and sciences, points to a component of a Lab-in-a-Box during a workshop on July 14 about frictional forces. Seated are Rhonda Webster, left, an educator at Oakdale School in Morgan County, and Jade Mason, a teacher at Philadelphia School in Loudon County. The workshop was held at the Pollard Technology Conference Center at Oak Ridge Associated Universities.

“These resources will be a great benefit to our small school,” said Rhonda Webster, a teacher at the Oakdale School in Morgan County. “Just to receive digital scales is incredible,” she said.

Jade Mason, science teacher at the Philadelphia School in Loudon County, said the kit “so easily connects to the standards we will have to teach.”

Tax-deductible corporate and individual donations to help fund the Rural Communities STEM Initiative and its Lab-in-a-Box program can be made through the Roane State Foundation by calling (865) 882-4507.

Roane State, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, the East Tennessee Economic Council and numerous East Tennessee businesses have contributed to the initiative. Key leaders of RCSI include Dr. Chris Whaley, president of Roane State Community College, and Barry Stephenson, president and CEO of Oak Ridge-based Materials and Chemistry Laboratory, Inc. (MCLinc).

Connect with us

Twitter / XFacebookInstagramThreadsYoutube
© Roane State Community College

Roane State Community College does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, creed, ethnicity or national origin, sex, disability, age, status as protected veteran or any other class protected by Federal or State laws and regulation and by Tennessee board of Regents policies with respect to employment, programs, and activities.​​​​​​​ View full non-discrimination policy.

Tennessee's Community Colleges

Report Fraud, Waste and Abuse

Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998