Students take time out for concrete lessons
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Christine Carrillo
For commuters, the familiarity they have with improvements to the San
Diego and Corona del Mar freeways has come from the numerous traffic
jams they’ve found themselves in since the project’s groundbreaking
in the fall of 2001.
On Monday afternoon, wearing hard hats and vests, students from
Costa Mesa High School got a much closer look at what’s really
happening behind those concrete barriers.
It was part of an educational outreach program for local high
school students that Caltrans called “Construction Challenge 2003,”
an academic competition between Estancia and Costa Mesa high schools.
“We’re always looking for new and creative ways to reach out to
the public, and this time we said, ‘Let’s show them how [math and
science] relates to what’s going on there,’” said Sandra Friedman,
public information officer for Caltrans. “Now, when they drive by,
they’ll have more of an understanding of what’s going on.”
The improvement project, which is a combined effort by Caltrans
and the Orange County Transportation Authority, includes the widening
of the freeway, construction of various ramps, bridge structures,
sound walls as well as the installation of drainage and electrical
items.
With so much work underway, Caltrans decided to use their
construction site as a teaching aid for high school students.
Caltrans officials developed a 30-minute test of applied science
and math questions that often arise during such projects to challenge
the students’ analytical thinking.
The academic decathlon team at Costa Mesa High, the largest team
in Orange County, rose to the challenge. As the winners of the
competition, they got the chance to tour the construction site and
get a feel for how professionals apply those academic skills to real
life situations.
“I think it’s good from a career standpoint,” said Joe Havens, who
has coached the team for the past three years. “It might spark one
person to become an engineer. As teachers, we are all encouraged to
help [students] learn about different careers. ... This does that.”
For the students, the competition and the tour gave them yet
another opportunity to learn.
As a member of the academic decathlon team, “you learn how to
compete in different areas ... and you learn different methods of
study,” said Brandon Slaney, 17, a senior interested in mechanical
engineering. “This is interesting because you learn how it all comes
together.”
“I think it’s been a lot of fun, and I think the kids have got a
lot out of it, and we have gotten a lot out of it,” Friedman said.
“They are our future drivers.”
* CHRISTINE CARRILLO covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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