Examples of ARC Education ProjectsGreene County Schoolhouse Project Improves Access to Science and Technology ResourcesWhen schools in rural Greene County, Pennsylvania, wanted to integrate technology into the classroom to prepare students for new technology jobs, the West Greene School District and the RJ Lee Group, a consulting company based in Pittsburgh, formed a partnership to develop innovative curricula and School-to-Work programs that can be used as a model for developing high-technology jobs in rural areas.West Greene School District and RJLG purchased and installed a scanning electron microscope and a computer lab in West Greene High School, and installed high-speed connections to the Internet to allow RJLG, as well as other schools and researchers, remote access to the microscope. RJLG trained both teachers and students to use the microscope. Two teachers act as liaisons between RJLG and the Schoolhouse Project and teach students and teachers how to use the microscope and the computers. Through the Internet and video-conferencing, the Schoolhouse Project also works with Columbia Basin College in Washington State, Iowa State University, and the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. Teachers now incorporate one of the most sophisticated scientific instruments into the chemistry and biology courses at the high school. RJLG hired two students to prepare specimens and arrange them for remote viewing and analysis when they rent the microscope outside of school hours. With the second phase of the project, additional equipment and computers were purchased, and 10 high school students and one college student were hired to work in the lab after school hours. New equipment allows the lab to prepare better quality and a wider variety of specimens for examination, and additional computers allow more students to work with the microscope simultaneously, as well as giving other high schools in the county—and beyond—greater access to the lab. Classes at Waynesburg College, Cherry Hill School District (Washington County, Pennsylvania) and California, Pennsylvania, now use the scanning electron microscope remotely. Elberton City Computer Center Fills a Learning Gap in the CommunityElberton City, Georgia, is giving students access to computers and help with schoolwork through its community technology center (CTC), a center supported in part by an ARC grant that funded renovations, furniture, and staffing, and by PowerUP, Inc., who gave the city computer equipment, training, and access to curricular resources. Until the PowerUP Lab opened in March 2002, many children in Elberton had nowhere to go for after-school assistance. However, the demand for the center was much greater than expected. Though the center was intended for children, many adults in the community also wanted to use the center. Additionally, the center couldn't always accommodate all the children who wanted to use it. Similarly, those children who rode the bus to school could not participate in the program. The city also discovered that different types of assistance were required for elementary, middle, and high school students. To accommodate these additional needs, the center has done a number of things in its second year of operation. The center purchased a van to transport children who didn't live within walking distance; the lab will expand to provide more workspace for volunteers to assist students with homework and for small groups to work at the computers; and lab hours will be extended to mornings to serve as a community learning center that will provide adults with literacy programs and volunteer training.
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