STEM Camp

Logan Roseth, of Bismarck, developed his own set of controllers to play Pac-Man on a laptop computer June 8-9 during a coding and robotics camp at Henderson State University in Arkadelphia. Henderson alum Michelle Johnson, director of the gifted and talented program at Fountain Lake, and Matthew Sutherlin, chair of curriculum and instruction at Henderson, led the two-day workshop. The camp was presented by Henderson's TRIO Talent Search program in conjunction with the Henderson STEM Center. Students worked with invention kits, coding software and robots to write their own problem-solving programs.
Logan Roseth, of Bismarck, developed his own set of controllers to play Pac-Man on a laptop computer June 8-9 during a coding and robotics camp at Henderson State University in Arkadelphia. Henderson alum Michelle Johnson, director of the gifted and talented program at Fountain Lake, and Matthew Sutherlin, chair of curriculum and instruction at Henderson, led the two-day workshop. The camp was presented by Henderson's TRIO Talent Search program in conjunction with the Henderson STEM Center. Students worked with invention kits, coding software and robots to write their own problem-solving programs.

Logan Roseth, of Bismarck, developed his own set of controllers to play Pac-Man on a laptop computer June 8-9 during a coding and robotics camp at Henderson State University in Arkadelphia. Henderson alum Michelle Johnson, director of the gifted and talented program at Fountain Lake, and Matthew Sutherlin, chair of curriculum and instruction at Henderson, led the two-day workshop. The camp was presented by Henderson's TRIO Talent Search program in conjunction with the Henderson STEM Center. Students worked with invention kits, coding software and robots to write their own problem-solving programs.

School on 06/26/2016

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