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For Immediate Release

July 6, 2007
Contact: 
John Hammond, Director
Public Relations, 210-733-2147

Robotics Competition at SAC
Fuels EDGE Students' Interest in Engineering

Twenty-eight high school students (10th - 12th grades) who are participating in San Antonio College's summer EDGE program (Early Development of General Engineering) got a chance to apply their newly acquired engineering skills in two robotics competitions today.  With seven teams of four students each, the students assembled and programmed Lego Mindstorms® NXT robots to follow strict competition guidelines.


In the SAC Grand Prix Race, teams had to program their robots to follow an "S" curve track as fast as possible without going off course.  The following Rebels team members, identified by their high schools, won this competition:  Joe Chen (Madison), Leona Hudspeth (Roosevelt), Pedro Leal (Roosevelt), and Pamela Ramon (Stevens).

The Automated Parking Competition required teams to park their robotic vehicle as precisely and quickly as possible in a "designated VIP space" in the "new SAC Parking Garage," while using unique tones or words to announce each turn, back into the parking place, safely steer around various obstacles, and park as closely as possible next to the wall without touching it. Team Phoenix won this competition:  Earnest Gibson (Clark), Ricardo Gonzalez (Burbank), Edward Rico (Fox Tech), and Arielle Solcher (Clark).

image of robotics students
Click for Hi Resolution Picture
High school students in the San Antonio College summer EDGE Program watch their robot move along an "S" track in the first ever SAC Grand Prix Race event.  They are, from left:  Ricardo Gonzalez (Burbank), Arielle Solcher (Clark), Ernest J. Gibson (Clark), and Edward Rico (Fox Tech).

  image of robotics student  
Click for Hi Resolution Picture  
High school students in the San Antonio College summer EDGE Program watch their robot park in the "SAC Garage" in the Automated Parking Competition event.  They are, front row from left -- Pedro Leal (Roosevelt), Jacob Ramirez (Warren), and Samantha Arevalo (Jefferson), and back row, from left -- Lucas Treviño (Rainbow Hills Baptist School) and Leona Hudspeth (Brackenridge).


Leal, the Rebels Team Leader, said he enjoyed constructing and programming the robot, "and the competition made it more interesting." 

Lucas Treviño (Rainbow Hills Baptist High School), from a runner-up team, said the EDGE Program and robotics competition "really opened my eyes to the engineering field.  It helped me see what I really want to do in the future."

Dr. Dan Dimitriu, Engineering Coordinator and Director of the EDGE Program, explained that the competition is part of an eight-week summer program (June 6 - July 27) for high school students who are interested in science and math.  Engineering Instructor Klaus Bartels served as judge and coach for the robotics competition.

"The program is a bridge between high school and the college freshman year," said Dimitriu, and it costs the students $25.  The U.S. Department of Education and the ACCD Foundation fund the program.  Students are enrolled in college-level Introduction to Engineering and lab-enhanced Introductory Physics.  After successfully completing the program, students earn five college credit hours that can be applied toward an Associate degree from San Antonio College and transferred toward a Bachelor's degree.

For more information, contact Dimitriu at 210-785-6049 or go to http://www.accd.edu/sac/edge.

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