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Four Stafford schools prepare top technical students for national competition Date published: 6/2/2009
BY HUGH MUIR
"Let me give you some scary statistics," said Warren Hamblet, head of technical education at H.H. Poole Middle School in southern Stafford. "There are 43,000 students studying technology at the college level in the United States. In similar schools in India, there are 655,000. In China, the number is 950,000." Hamblet sponsors and coaches the Poole chapter of the Technology Student Association, a nationwide organization that encourages middle and high school students to study and compete in a wide range of technological subjects. Of the 13 middle and high schools in Stafford, four have TSA organizations. Poole and Gayle middle schools and Colonial Forge and Mountain View high schools expect to send about 60 students to this year's national competition in Denver. The 12,000 competitors there will come from a nationwide TSA membership of 150,000 in 2,000 schools spanning 47 states. Sixty schools in Virginia are expected to compete. "Nobody gets paid to do this," said Terry Godwin, TSA advisor at Mountain View. "TSA has few industrial sponsors, so the kids and their families have to raise most of the money to pay for the program." COLONIAL FORGE HIGH Colonial Forge High School has the largest TSA chapter in Virginia, with 148 members. It sent 134 students to the northern regional competition in March, and 106 to the state competition in early May, where its members competed in 36 of the 39 events offered. It came away with 10 first-place awards, five seconds and seven thirds, plus the Outstanding School Award. Colonial Forge will send 47 students to Denver to compete in events such as Animatronics, Architecture Model, Desktop Publishing, Fashion Design (its four-member team won first place in the state with a coral prom gown), Music Production and Future Technology Teacher. "All of these events have something to do with the technology-education curriculum," said Dori Roberts, TSA adviser at Colonial Forge and Virginia's TSA Adviser of the Year in 2008. "This takes what students learn in class to a far, far higher level. They are no longer working for an A, but for the satisfaction of the technical challenge itself."
Read more stories about Stafford Date published: 6/2/2009
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