St. Louis and Clayton Students Named Missouri's 'Best in State' Winners in 2010 JETS TEAMS Engineering Competition
Tackle Global Water Challenge
ALEXANDRIA, Va., April 14 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Students from Ladue Horton Watkins High School in St. Louis and Clayton High School in Clayton have been named the "Best in State" winners in Missouri in the Junior Engineering Technical Society's (JETS) 31st annual TEAMS engineering competition for 2010. This year, they tackled one of the world's most pressing problems -- the global water shortage -- highlighted recently by the Haiti earthquake.
The St. Louis students were named the top ranked 9/10 grade level team, while those from Clayton took the top 11/12 grade level rank. As "Best in State" winners the two teams receive medals and certificates, and will now vie for top national honors as "Best Overall" teams to be announced later in April. The "Best Overall" teams will receive $2,500 for their schools and the top ranked 11/12 grade team will receive a three-night stay at the Walt Disney World Resort.
The St. Louis and Clayton students worked on their water challenges at the St. Louis Community College at Florissant Valley on February 26th.
Themed, "Water, Water Everywhere," the competition demonstrated to the more than 10,000 participating students around the country how engineers in various disciplines, including environmental engineers, civil engineers, and mechanical engineers are involved in the protection and delivery of the world's water supply.
"We want to congratulate our "Best in State" winners in Missouri. TEAMS, like all of JETS' programs, is designed to show today's students just how important engineers in the various disciplines are to solving society's problems," said Peter Carrato, Bechtel Corporation Fellow and Immediate Past President of the Board of Directors of JETS. "While this year's theme of water was selected last year, it couldn't have been more relevant to the students, given the news they have watched from Haiti as people struggle to find clean, drinkable water."
Each year, JETS, through its TEAMS competition, provides students in grades nine through 12 with the opportunity to make real-world connections between math and science to engineering by solving actual engineering scenarios. For more information about TEAMS and other JETS engineering programs for America's high school students, please visit www.JETS.org.
SOURCE Junior Engineering Technical Society (JETS)
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