Teams of four from local high schools will spend several weeks applying lessons learned in physics class to build handmade vessels that are buoyant, stable and “seaworthy” enough to row across the university’s 50-meter swimming pool in the shortest time possible – without sinking. The fastest and least waterlogged teams will come away with cash prizes, a pizza party and plaques.
The second-annual event is part of the Grand Challenge series sponsored by UH’s Houston-Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation (H-LSAMP), a BP Foundation grant and the UH College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics (NSM). The regatta is intended to encourage students at predominately minority and underprivileged high schools to study physics, chemistry, computer science, mathematics and engineering and is part of H-LSAMP’s recruiting efforts for NSM. The competition is, however, open to all schools and students in grades 9-12. Deadline for registration is April 15.
H-LSAMP is a well-established, federally funded program between UH and local schools with the goal of recruiting and funding minority students who choose to major in one of the STEM disciplines that include science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Since H-LSAMP began more than a decade ago, the number of minority undergraduates receiving science or engineering degrees from UH has risen 50 percent.
| WHAT: | Spring Grand Challenge: Extreme Boating Regatta |
| WHEN: | 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday, April 23 |
| WHERE: | University of Houston Campus Recreation and Wellness Center Natatorium Map: https://www.uh.edu/campus_map/buildings/CRWC.php |
| WHO: | Houston-area high school students UH’s Houston-Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation (H-LSAMP) |
Editor’s note: Photos of last year’s event are available to media by contacting Lisa Merkl.
For more information about UH, visit the university’s Newsroom.
To receive UH science news via e-mail, sign up for UH-SciNews.
For additional news alerts about UH, follow us on Facebook and Twitter.