Saturday, May 8, 2004

1st Place at Computational Expo in 2004!

I appreciate all of the students who responded to my challenge and prodding
with so many wonderful memories!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
May 8, 2004
Montgomery, Alabama

Bulldogs Victors at
Statewide Computational EXPO!

         The Alabama Computational EXPO 2004 was jointly hosted by the University of Alabama in Huntsville and Jeff Davis High School at Jeff Davis High School on May 8, 2004.  Bulldogs won top recognition for performance on research projects, written exams, essays and in web page design.  This was the seventh consecutive year that UMS-Wright placed a first place winner in one of the three high school divisions! Students from UMS-Wright won certificates, plaques, cash awards & scholarships.
          The 1st Place research project and “Teachers Choice” award were won by Walker Plash, Jim Bailey and Howard Walker in a research project titled “The Medieval Siege Engine: The Catapult” (an computer based energy analysis of catapult performance).  The 3rd Place research project was by William Hatten and Dane Grovenstein with a project titled “Racket Slammer” (a computer based momentum analysis of tennis racket performance).  
         UMS-Wright students Walker Plash, Jim Bailey and Howard Walker  won 1st Place in “Student Website”.  Jim Bailey won 1st in the “Deltacom Essay” award.     
         In the written "Computational Exam" Walker Plash won 1st among all at the competition!  Four UMS-Wright students were among the top 15 students taking the exam and included Jim Bailey, William Hatten and Howard Walker.  UMS-Wright was also recognized for having the highest average score on the written exam among all participating high schools.  Walker Plash was awarded a scholarship for his performance on the exam.
       The students who took part in this competition are part of "computational Physics Class" that requires research and programming skills be developed to geneerate projects for this competition.  Dr. Burgess escorted the students to the "Alabama SuperComputer Program for Research In Education"  and stated  "These students are special.  Competence in coding, researching, writing and communicating must be performed at the highest levels to win at this competition.  That is precisely what they did.   These fine individuals need to be congratulated and honored!"


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Combining my love for competition and interest in science was something I did from early on in my career. 
I also liked to do “action research” to evaluate initiatives in my class and department.

Physics First” was a department wide change in science sequence that I wanted to implement if able to.

Thursday, February 12, 2004

1st Place at Auburn Physics Invitational 2004!

I appreciate all of the students who responded to my challenge and prodding
with so many wonderful memories!

First Place at Auburn University Invitational!


Date: February 12, 2004
Location: Auburn, Alabama

      Auburn University hosted the annual Chemistry, Geology, Geography & Physics Invitational Competition at the Auburn University main campus. A hundred high schools from around the state of Alabama were invited to bring teams of outstanding science students. The competition took place on Thursday (February 12th) top science students from high schools of all sizes and types attempted to win as a team in the competition sponsored jointly by the Science Departments at Auburn University. The UMS-Wright Team of Beko Binder, Dima Zakharov, Vanessa Moore and Vidu Yarlagdda of UMS-Wright Preparatory school won first place.

      The competition involved a students publicly responding to posed Geology, Geography, Physics and Chemistry problems in a timed pressured environment. Teams of students responding correctly to the posed questions and problems in the time provided earned points. The team with the most points won.

      Science Chair Dr. Tim Burgess, observed “Our science student team displayed the effort, persistence and skill required to win in a competition that included schools with outstanding students and outstanding programs in the physical sciences. These students are to be congratulated.”





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Combining my love for competition and interest in science was something I did from early on in my career. 
I also liked to do “action research” to evaluate initiatives in my class and department.

“Physics First” was a department wide change in science sequence that I wanted to implement if able to.


Friday, February 6, 2004

Physics Team Penta-peats 2004!

I appreciate all of the students who responded to my challenge and prodding
with so many wonderful memories!

              Physics Bulldogs Penta-Peat at the
University of Alabama High School Physics Contest!!

Date: February 6, 2004
Location: Tuscaloosa, Alabama


      The University of Alabama hosted the 28th annual High School Physics contest held at the Scholastic rooms at Bryant Denny Stadium. The competition was attended by more than 43 teams and 241 students from Alabama and Mississippi. Individual testing provided winning competitors with the possibility of winning one of two four year scholarships at this competition. The UMS-Wright Preparatory School Physics Team placed 1st among all private schools for the fifth consecutive year! In the private school category UMS-Wright (Mobile) won 1st, Randolph School (Huntsville) was 2nd , Briarwood (Birmingham) was 3rd and John Carroll (Birmingham) was 4th.

      The UMS-Wright Physics Team consisted of Dima Zakharov, Richard Friedman, Dennis Blowser and Beko Binder. Jim Bailey supported the team as an alternate. In the “Private Schools Division” the UMS-Wright Team scored 58 points, Randolph scored 35 points and Briarwood scored 32 points.

      The bulldogs also managed to rank among all the schools at the competition regardless of size, type or curriculum focus. Homewood High School was 1st overall, the Mississippi School of Math and Science was 2nd, Vestavia was 3rd and UMS-Wright was 4th among all Physics teams from all schools.

      The team portion of the competition consists of problems solved by each of the 4 team members individually. Physics problems are presented to one representative of each team at the same time. Those who generate correct solutions faster to each of the question earn more points. The sum of all points by all four team members is the team score.

      Only the very best Physics students attend this competition to take part in the individual testing. Individual testing is used to determine scholarship offerings. Four of the five UMS-Wright team members were in the top 20% of the of the individual test takers. Beko Binder was identified as one of the top ten competitors among the 246 competitors that vied for the scholarships.

      Dr. Tim Burgess, observed “Winning first place in five consecutive years at a high stakes and highly competitive Alabama High School Physics Contest is unprecedented. Such a tremendous accomplishment is not solely the result superior intellectual skill, but it is also evidence of great character. Only character can make repeatedly winning at this level possible."