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Two ORHS students among 100 in state to earn perfect score on TCAP writing test

Posted at 11:28 pm January 29, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Abigail Greenhalgh, David Bryant, and Sarah Dowling

From left are Abigail Greenhalgh, David Bryant, and Sarah Dowling. (Submitted photo)

Two Oak Ridge High School students were among only 100 students in the state of Tennessee to earn a perfect score on the 2014 TCAP Writing Assessment, a press release said.

Abigail Greenhalgh and Sarah Dowling each received a perfect score on all categories of the assessment, which was given statewide last February. The students each received a certificate signed by Governor Bill Haslam and the commissioner of education.

“This is a fine example of how well our teachers are preparing our students to be proficient writers, not only at the high school, but at the elementary and middle schools as well,” Oak Ridge High School David Bryant said.

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News, Honors and Spotlight, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: Abigail Greenhalgh, Bill Haslam, David Bryant, Oak Ridge High School, Sarah Dowling, TCAP, TCAP Writing Assessment

Documentary on kindness to be shown to middle school, high school girls on Feb. 12

Posted at 7:31 pm January 28, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Schools will show a documentary on kindness to middle school and high school girls at 6 p.m. Thursday, February 12.

The documentary, “Finding Kind,” will be shown at Oak Ridge High School, and the evening is expected last until approximately 8:30 p.m., with activities to include viewing the documentary, discussions led by Oak Ridge School staff counselors, and then wrapping up with the opportunity for girls to take a kindness pledge, to apologize to those they may have wronged, and then to express something kind to their peers, a press release said.

Door prizes will be awarded as well.

The press release said this event is recommended to girls ages 11 and up due to language and some content. This event is free of charge. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Entertainment, Front Page News, K-12, Meetings and Events, Movies Tagged With: documentary, Finding Kind, kindness, Lauren Pareskian, Molly Stroud, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, relationships

Grant will allow Roane State to expand mechatronics program

Posted at 11:23 pm January 27, 2015
By Roane State Community College Leave a Comment

Chris Whaley

Chris Whaley

Roane State Community College will use a nearly $1 million state grant to expand its mechatronics program and to pilot offering the program’s first year as dual credit courses for high school students. The college will partner with schools in Oak Ridge and Anderson County.

The mechatronics program trains students to become technicians who operate, maintain, and repair high-tech automated manufacturing systems. Roane State offers a one-year certificate in mechatronics. Through a $970,000 Labor Education Alignment Program, or LEAP, grant, Roane State will create a two-year associate degree in mechatronics. The program will be launched in fall 2015.

“We are honored to receive a LEAP grant, and we appreciate the hard work of our partners and our legislative delegation on the grant,” Roane State President Chris Whaley said. “The grant is built on great partnerships between Roane State, industries, local school systems and the Tennessee Colleges of Applied Technology. Working together, we will help students learn the skills they need for high-tech manufacturing careers.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Career and Tech Center, Chris Whaley, Clinton Higher Education and Workforce Training Facility, Labor Education Alignment Program, LEAP, Markus Pomper, mechatronics, Oak Ridge High School, Roane State, Roane State Community College, TCAT, Tennessee College of Applied Technology, Tennessee Colleges of Applied Technology

UT engineers helping ORNL with key sustainable energy riddle

Posted at 10:40 pm January 27, 2015
By University of Tennessee Leave a Comment

Alexander Papandrew and Gerd Duscher

Gerd Duscher, left, of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, and Alexander Papandrew, of the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. (Photo courtesy University of Tennessee)

KNOXVILLE—One of the key holdups in the march toward more efficient sustainable energy could soon be answered, thanks in part to researchers at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.

The College of Engineering’s Alexander Papandrew and Gerd Duscher are part of a broader Oak Ridge National Laboratory-led team that recently received a $2.75 million U.S. Department of Energy grant for work on improving fuel cells, $1.4 million of which went to their project.

The basic premise of their work is to find a far more efficient way to turn chemical energy—in this case natural gas—into electrical energy. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy, Alexander Papandrew, ARPA-E, catalysts, chemical energy, College of Engineering, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, DOE, electrical energy, electrodes, electrolyte, fuel cells, Gerd Duscher, natural gas, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, platinum, sustainable energy, U.S. Department of Energy, University of Tennessee, UT

Roane State course teaches emergency responders lessons learned from combat

Posted at 10:23 pm January 27, 2015
By Roane State Community College Leave a Comment

Roane State Combat Care Course

Roane State’s Kirk Harris (second from left, facing camera) reviews the main points from the college’s two-day combat casualty care/tactical emergency casualty care course. (Photo courtesy Roane State)

 

Roane State Community College’s Kirk Harris believes details save lives.

Harris, director of continuing healthcare and safety education, recently started offering a course on tactical combat casualty care/tactical emergency casualty care. The course applies lessons learned from the experiences of U.S. soldiers and the latest research on combat care in Iraq and Afghanistan to situations first responders could face.

“Unfortunately, we are seeing law enforcement incidents that are more like military combat, such as mass shootings at schools and industries,” Harris said. “We can learn a lot from the experiences of soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. This course brings that knowledge together.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Health, Meetings and Events, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Afghanistan, combat care, continuing healthcare, first responders, Iraq, Kirk Harris, Roane State Community College, safety education, soldiers, tactical combat casualty care, tactical emergency casualty care

Snow dusts Oak Ridge; Anderson, Roane schools closed

Posted at 9:32 am January 27, 2015
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Snow January 27, 2015

A light layer of snow dusted Oak Ridge on Tuesday morning. (Photo by Sarah Johnson)

 

A light layer of snow dusted Oak Ridge on Tuesday morning, and schools were closed in Anderson and Roane counties.

The Anderson County Schools’ Central Office was following its bad weather procedures. The Roane County Schools’ Central Office opened one hour late.

Oak Ridge Schools opened on time.

Clinton City Schools reported that roads were clear in Clinton—”and school buildings are warm”—and schools would open on time. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, K-12, Top Stories, Weather Tagged With: Anderson County Schools, Clinton City Schools, Michael Grider, Oak Ridge Schools, Roane County schools, Sarah Johnson, snow

BOE: Fix lead paint now, prepare for new Preschool by 2016-2017

Posted at 8:47 pm January 26, 2015
By John Huotari 2 Comments

Oak Ridge Board of Education and City Council

The Oak Ridge Board of Education, seated at right, and City Council, left, are pictured above during a Jan. 15 work session on the Oak Ridge Schools’ Preschool, among other agenda items.

 

Finding a new preschool might not happen as quickly as some would like, but the city’s school board on Monday recommended a few first steps that could have children in a new building by the 2016-2017 school year.

The main concern now: Fix the lead-based paint on the decades-old home of the Preschool on New York Avenue. That repair could cost an estimated $150,000. A remediation plan could be submitted to federal officials and Anderson County education officials by March 4.

There had been some hope that a new home for preschool students might be found as early as this August. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Education, K-12, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: BOE, Bruce Borchers, G Building, Head Start, Head Start funding, Jessica Hill, lead-based paint, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, Oak Ridge Schools Preschool and Robert J. Smallridge School Administration Building, ORHS, preschool, school board

School Board could make Preschool recommendation tonight

Posted at 11:12 am January 26, 2015
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Charlsey Cofer and Oak Ridge City Council and School Board

Principal Charlsey Cofer, left, discusses the Oak Ridge Schools Preschool with Oak Ridge City Council members and City Manager Mark Watson, seated at table, during a Jan. 15 work session with the Oak Ridge Board of Education.

 

Note: This story was last updated at 12:25 p.m.

It’s been on the city’s wish list for decades, but city and school officials now appear closer to finding a solution to repairing or replacing the city’s preschool.

Officials said they’ve “kicked the can down the road” for years, but the discussion gained urgency after lead-based paint was found on the exterior of the 70-year-old building during a routine inspection in the spring of 2014. It could cost up to $150,000 to make repairs. Officials have characterized that as a Band-Aid or “last investment.”

“We’re going to have make a decision now, unfortunately, because of the paint,” said Keys Fillauer, Oak Ridge Board of Education chair. “The bottom line is: How are we going to pay for this?” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Education, K-12, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Allen Thacker, Bob Eby, Charlie Hensley, Charlsey Cofer, Chuck Hope, Keys Fillauer, Mark Watson, Mitchell Road, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Preschool, Oak Ridge Schools, Oak Ridge Schools Preschool and Robert J. Smallridge School Administration Building, preschool, Trina Baughn, Wackenhut, WSI Oak Ridge

Science: Warming could cause great loss of Great Barrier Reef corals

Posted at 5:18 pm January 25, 2015
By University of Tennessee Leave a Comment

Coral Reef

The coverage of living corals on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef could decline to less than 10 percent if ocean warming continues, according to a new study. (Photo credit: Catlin Seaview Survey/Underwater Earth)

 

KNOXVILLE—Living corals covering Australia’s Great Barrier Reef could decline to less than 10 percent if ocean warming continues, according to a new study that explores the short- and long-term consequences of environmental changes to the reef.

The study was done by an international team of ecologists at the National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis, or NIMBioS, at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. It is available pre-print online in the journal Ecology at http://bit.ly/1JmaLk0.

Environmental change has caused the loss of more than half the world’s reef-building corals. Coral cover, a measure of the percentage of the seafloor covered by living coral, is now just 10-20 percent worldwide. The Great Barrier Reef, once considered one of the more pristine global reef systems, has lost half its coral cover in the last 27 years. Overfishing, coastal pollution, and increased greenhouse gas emissions leading to increased temperatures and ocean acidification, as well as other human impacts, are all disrupting the delicate balance maintained in coral reef ecosystems. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Science Tagged With: coral cover, coral reef, corals, ecology, environmental change, global warming, Great Barrier Reef, James Cook University, Jennifer K. Cooper, John Bruno, Matthew Spencer, National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis, National Science Foundation, NIMBioS, ocean temperature, ocean warming, Queensland, University of North Carolina, University of Tennessee

Haslam announces winners of LEAP competition, including Roane State

Posted at 12:52 pm January 24, 2015
By Dawn Huotari Leave a Comment

Governor Bill Haslam

Bill Haslam

Submitted

Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam in December announced the recipients of the Labor Education Alignment Program, or LEAP, competition, a state effort focused on increasing opportunities for Tennesseans to obtain a certificate or degree beyond high school that is aligned with the needs of the workforce in their communities.

“These types of intentional partnerships between local agencies and their colleges or TCATS are what we want to see across the state as a significant piece of the Drive to 55 initiative,” Haslam said. “Tying the training and skills that our colleges are teaching directly to current workforce needs will help more Tennesseans qualify for good paying, high quality jobs.”

The communities and colleges selected as LEAP recipients exemplify the collaboration and alignment between workforce needs and higher education that are at the core of the Drive to 55,” Haslam said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Government, State, Top Stories Tagged With: Bill Haslam, Drive to 55, higher education, jobs, Labor Education Alignment Program, LEAP, Roane State Community College, workforce

Hike for Your Heart at Haw Ridge on Feb. 7

Posted at 12:02 am January 22, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Haw Ridge Park Parking Lot

Part of the Melton Lake Greenway is pictured above at the Haw Ridge Park parking lot.

 

Oak Ridge city and school officials will kick off Heart Health Month with a walk and hike at Haw Ridge Park on February 7.

Hike for Your Heart is a 4.2-mile walk with optional trail hiking included. It starts at 9 a.m. Saturday, February 7, and the public is invited. The walk and hike has been organized by the City of Oak Ridge Wellness Committee and Oak Ridge Coordinated School Health.

The walking path has varied elevations, a press release said. Walkers will leave the Haw Ridge parking area on Edgemoor Road promptly at 9 a.m. February 7. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Health, Health, K-12, Oak Ridge, Recreation, Slider, Sports, Top Stories Tagged With: Cindi Gordon, City of Oak Ridge, greenways, Haw Ridge, Haw Ridge hike, healthy activities, Heart Health Month, hike, Oak Ridge Coordinated School Health, recreational areas, Wellness Committee

A few tickets left for Saturday fundraiser for Roane State scholarships

Posted at 6:20 pm January 21, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

High Tea Roane State Fundraiser

From left, Sally Peterka with Roane State’s Roane County site support team and Roane State Foundation board member Dana Peterka prepare items for a silent auction that will be part of the Foundation’s Jan. 24 Upstairs/Downstairs High Tea. (Submitted photo)

 

A few tickets remain for Roane State Foundation’s Upstairs/Downstairs High Tea on Saturday. Proceeds will be used for student scholarships.

The fundraiser is inspired by the hit show “Downton Abbey.” It starts at 2 p.m. Saturday, January 24, at the Whitestone Country Inn in Kingston.

In the picture above, Sally Peterka, left, with Roane State’s Roane County site support team and Roane State Foundation board member Dana Peterka prepare items for a silent auction that will be part of the Upstairs/Downstairs High Tea. Roane State Foundation board member Mary Ann Reeves helped collect the auction items, and the Foundation invites you to enjoy a traditional tea and bid on your favorite goodies.

A limited number of tickets ($50 for individuals, $75 for couples) remain. To order tickets, contact the Roane State Foundation at (865) 882-4507 or foundationdept@roanestate.edu.

Filed Under: College, Education, Top Stories Tagged With: Dana Peterka, Downton Abbey, Mary Ann Reeves, Roane State Foundation, Sally Peterka, scholarships, student scholarships, Upstairs/Downstairs High Tea, Whitestone Country Inn

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