Hall students win first in speed in IVCC Edible Car Contest

  Comments (...)
Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

The cars may have been low tech, but the timing for the speed competition was definitely high tech. Under the guidance of Jim Gibson, electronics program coordinator, electronics students designed, programmed and built a programmable logic controller (PLC) to time the speed on the track.

The control was connected to a computer running Rockwell automated software and it utilized a reflective photo eye at the start and finish.

In addition to recording the time, the software also translated the time into “mouthfuls per hour.”

To highlight Engineering Week, as spectators and participants were gathering for the speed competition, they competed for prizes by completing a quiz on engineering career information. Correct answers were announced during the awards ceremony.

The quiz question that generated the most incorrect answers was about the percentage of people in engineering careers who are women, Perez said.

“Women make up less than 20 percent of the engineering workforce,” she said, explaining that most people believe there is a much higher percentage.

“That’s one reason why there is a big push nationally to increase the exposure of young women to STEM.”

The contest was sponsored by the Division of Career and Technical Programs and the Making Industry Meaningful In College (MIMIC) project. The contest originated in 2006 with support from a National Science Foundation grant.

Judges were IVCC educational technologists Mary Smith and Dawn Lockwood and engineering technology student Kevin Staton. The Student Government Association provided pizza.

Organizers were Perez, Gibson and communications instructor Rose Marie Lynch.

In 2012, IVCC’s Edible Car Contest was one of 10 finalists for a prestigious Bellwether Award, a national award which recognizes outstanding and innovative community college projects. It was IVCC’s second nomination for the contest.

||2|Next Page

Comments

Total Comments
0

View/Add Comments

There have been no comments made about this story.

National Video