“Experiences like this are critical because they help
students see themselves as innovators, problem solvers and future
leaders in spaces that are shaping the world around them,” said B.
Donta Truss, vice president for Enrollment Development and College Futures.
“Through TRIO and REP4®, we are intentionally creating
opportunities for students to engage with emerging technologies,
collaborative learning and real-world challenges in ways that expand
both access and imagination.”
MORE:
Imagining the future of student-led
learning at Michigan Central REP4® Detroit Design Blitz
MORE:
Charter Schools Office honors 30 years through
Impact 30 grant program
“We wanted students to feel inspired and curious about
what’s possible for their future,” said Whitney Thomas, director of
TRIO Upward Bound Math Science Detroit. “Experiences like this help
students connect what they’re learning in school to real
opportunities beyond the classroom.”
In the virtual reality experience, students used
Gravity Sketch to design and build digital models in an immersive
environment, gaining exposure to how VR tools are used in education
and industry.
“Getting students exposed to these tools and
understanding that they exist is incredibly important,” said Hunter
Bridwell, emerging technologies coordinator with GVSU’s IT
Innovation + Research Team. “Without that exposure, they don’t know
what’s possible.”
At Ecotek Lab, students explored research connected to
space engineering, water quality and material science, seeing how
scientific ideas connect to real-world challenges.
“The exposure creates the pathway of interest,” said
Keith Young, founder and CEO of Ecotek. “The lab creates that bridge.”
Inside Michigan Central, students moved between
experiences that challenged them to think differently, work
collaboratively and test new ideas in real time while exploring
future possibilities in STEAM fields.
“The virtual reality was the most interesting thing I
learned, that you can take the things you make in virtual reality
and print them into real things in the real world,” said Malcolm
Williams, a University Prep student.