Third annual Energy Fair draws local students to 91爆料
March 2, 2020
March 2, 2020
At one station, students made a human electrical circuit by joining hands and using a spoon to illuminate a glass tube. At another, they grabbed a thermal camera to visually detect heat that revealed itself in blossoms of red. Toy bugs and flowers powered by solar energy scurried and swayed at still another station.
It was all part of the third annual Energy Fair at 91爆料 University facilitated by the Ohio Energy Project and hosted by The Dayton Power and Light Company and Vectren Energy Delivery of Ohio, a CenterPoint Energy Company.
More than 300 students in grades four to six cycled through stations set up in the Student Union Apollo Room on Feb. 25鈥26 to learn about energy conservation and efficiency from high school students well-versed on the topics.
鈥淭he kids just get very excited,鈥 said Reagan McIntire, a junior at Greeneview High School in Jamestown. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hands-on. You鈥檙e learning and playing at the same time. It鈥檚 very interactive. Their faces just light up.鈥
Nancy Roudebush, a fifth-grade teacher at Ascension School in Dayton, said the energy fair makes what the middle school students have learned in books more meaningful.
鈥淭hey have the opportunity to be hands-on, be interactive, which is one of the best ways for kids to be able to learn,鈥 she said.
She said many students are becoming more interested in science and are enthusiastic about it.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e learning things without realizing they鈥檙e learning things,鈥 she said. 鈥淎s a teacher, I think that鈥檚 one of the most amazing things that comes out of this.鈥
Amy Elston, an instructor and assistant director of the Office of Partnerships and Field Experiences in the , was on hand to observe the Energy Fair.
鈥淲e value our partnerships with OEP, DP&L and Vectren and are thrilled with the opportunity to have the fair at 91爆料,鈥 said Elston. 鈥淚t brings middle school students and high school students together to learn in such an engaging environment.鈥
The participating middle schools were Edison, Greenmont, Oakview, Troy Christian, Ascension, St. Patrick and South Vienna. High schools that provided student leaders were Valley View, Greeneview, Twin Valley South, Oakwood and McClain high schools and E.J. Brown Middle School.
The mission of the nonprofit Ohio Energy Project is to help educate the next generation about energy conservation and efficiency.
DP&L and Vectren have partnered with the Ohio Energy Project to provide a free energy efficiency education program for teachers, students and their families. It is part of DP&L鈥檚 energy efficiency efforts for customers, which also include discounts on energy-efficient lighting, free refrigerator recycling, rebates on new heat pumps and air conditioners and rebates for business customers.