RPS Citizen Scientists Receive $ 25,000 In New Technology For The Mary Munford Elementary | education



Mary Munford Elementary School’s fourth grade teacher Crystal Clark shows what she’s got for her classroom with the $ 25,000 she won at the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation in Richmond on Friday, September 17, 2021 bought. This is the first year of the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation and is part of the CIA’s ongoing efforts to strengthen STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and math) education. The classroom transformation program is sponsored by the CIA and administered by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE). EVA RUSSO / TIMES-DISPATCH



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Mary Munford Elementary School’s fourth grade teacher Crystal Clark shows what she’s got for her classroom with the $ 25,000 she won at the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation in Richmond on Friday, September 17, 2021 bought. This is the first year of the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation and is part of the CIA’s ongoing efforts to strengthen STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and math) education. Here you can see the new hydroponic table on which the students want to grow lettuce. EVA RUSSO / TIMES-DISPATCH



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Mary Munford Elementary School’s fourth grade teacher Crystal Clark shows what she’s got for her classroom with the $ 25,000 she won at the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation in Richmond on Friday, September 17, 2021 bought. This is the first year of the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation and is part of the CIA’s ongoing efforts to strengthen STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and math) education. The classroom transformation program is sponsored by the CIA and administered by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE). EVA RUSSO / TIMES-DISPATCH



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Mary Munford Elementary School’s fourth grade teacher Crystal Clark shows what she’s got for her classroom with the $ 25,000 she won at the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation in Richmond on Friday, September 17, 2021 bought. This is the first year of the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation and is part of the CIA’s ongoing efforts to strengthen STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and math) education. Here you can see the new spotting scope. EVA RUSSO / TIMES-DISPATCH



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Mary Munford Elementary School’s fourth grade teacher Crystal Clark shows what she’s got for her classroom with the $ 25,000 she won at the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation in Richmond on Friday, September 17, 2021 bought. This is the first year of the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation and is part of the CIA’s ongoing efforts to strengthen STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and math) education. Here you can see the new digital microscope. EVA RUSSO / TIMES-DISPATCH



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Mary Munford Elementary School’s fourth grade teacher Crystal Clark shows what she’s got for her classroom with the $ 25,000 she won at the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation in Richmond on Friday, September 17, 2021 bought. This is the first year of the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation and is part of the CIA’s ongoing efforts to strengthen STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and math) education. Here you can see the new game camera. EVA RUSSO / TIMES-DISPATCH



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Mary Munford Elementary School’s fourth grade teacher Crystal Clark shows what she’s got for her classroom with the $ 25,000 she won at the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation in Richmond on Friday, September 17, 2021 bought. This is the first year of the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation and is part of the CIA’s ongoing efforts to strengthen STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and math) education. The classroom transformation program is sponsored by the CIA and administered by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE). EVA RUSSO / TIMES-DISPATCH

Crystal Clark’s Citizen Scientists just got a few more gadgets that they can use to study the world around them.

Clark, a fourth grade teacher at Mary Munford Elementary in Richmond, won a redesign award package as part of the CIA Mission Possible Classroom Transformation program, which helps strengthen STEAM education in science, technology, engineering, the arts, and math of the classroom worth $ 25,000. The program is first year sponsored by the CIA and administered by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education of the US Department of Energy.

Clark, a 24-year senior teacher and former teacher at the regional Mathematics & Science Center, now called the MathScience Innovation Center, learned of her award in July. With her $ 25,000, Clark received a variety of items: computers, iPads, a television, GoPro and wildlife cameras, and spotting scopes for observing the plants and trees and life outside of her classroom window, a digital microscope, a color printer, a 3D -Printer and more.

There was a hydroculture table in the hallway next to her classroom, on which her class and others can begin growing foods such as salads and herbs, which are added to the foods grown in the school’s outdoor garden. Clark selected items for the school’s existing rooftop weather station that needed to be updated, as well as new items for the school’s television station – a green screen, camera, and teleprompter – where students daily “MMTV” broadcasts of current events and deliver the weather.

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