8 Additional Hamilton County Schools To Receive Volkswagen eLabs

  • Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Volkswagen Group of America Chattanooga Operations, LLC (Volkswagen Chattanooga) in partnership with the State of Tennessee, Hamilton County Department of Education (HCDE), and Public Education Foundation (PEF), have named eight additional HCDE schools to receive digital fabrication equipment as part of the Volkswagen eLabs initiative.  

Volkswagen eLabs, the result of a $1 million donation by Volkswagen Chattanooga and the State of Tennessee, provide students access to digital fabrication tools including automated manufacturing equipment, programmable microcomputers, renewable energy kits, 3D printers, robotics, laser cutters, and other emergent technologies that will empower them to engage in authentic problem solving.

The eight schools chosen are:

·         Brainerd High School

·         Brown Middle School

·         Center for Creative Arts

·         Hixson Middle School

·         Hixson High School

·         Ooltewah Middle School

·         Orchard Knob Middle School

·         Soddy Daisy Middle School

The eight schools represent the second round of recipients for the Volkswagen eLabs, fulfilling Volkswagen’s commitment to open a total of 16 eLabs in Hamilton County schools over a two year period. The first eight schools were opened in August 2017.

“Through partnerships like the one we’ve created with Volkswagen, Tennessee will lead in workforce development and job growth,” Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam said. “The Volkswagen eLabs create an environment where middle school and high school students can learn new and innovative skills that will help them prepare for careers in the high-skilled manufacturing industry. I congratulate the eight Hamilton County schools selected to receive the second round of Volkswagen eLabs and thank Volkswagen for its continued investment in our state’s education system and future workforce.”

“The results of the Volkswagen eLabs have been inspiring. I look forward to seeing the additional eight labs operating and cultivating an atmosphere of learning and exploration,” said Nicole Koesling, senior vice president of Human Resources at Volkswagen Chattanooga. “At Volkswagen, we are dedicated to the principles of education and training, and the eLabs are certainly a major piece of this, enhancing the quality of education available to young people throughout our community.”

“Volkswagen has been a great partner to our state for over 10 years and I appreciate the company for continuing to invest in innovative ideas like the Volkswagen eLabs that promote future growth in our state,” said Bob Rolfe, Tennessee Department of Economic & Community Development (TNECD) Commissioner. “Through the Volkswagen eLabs, the eight Hamilton County middle and high schools chosen in this round will give their students the opportunity to enhance their skills by learning new techniques that will prepare them for the future workforce. This program goes hand-in-hand with one of our state’s main goals: strengthening our education system.”

After extensive site visits, schools were selected by representatives from Volkswagen Chattanooga, Tennessee Department of Education, TNECD, HCDE, and PEF.

"Volkswagen continues to show us that industry partnerships with our schools result in a win for everyone,” said Candice McQueen, Tennessee Department of Education Commissioner. “Many of these schools serve our highest-need students in the state, and this new equipment will now equip more students to pursue additional career pathways after high school – which will set them and their communities up for success."

The eight chosen schools were required to identify a team of four teachers, including a Volkswagen eLab Specialist, who will serve on the Volkswagen eLab Innovation Team to ensure each Volkswagen eLab is used to its maximum capacity. The schools are each responsible for raising $5,000 annually in cash or contributed materials to ensure that the lab is continually refreshed and materials are replaced.

“The Volkswagen eLabs have created an excitement for learning and you can see that in the eyes of the children who have the opportunity to utilize them,” said Dr. Bryan Johnson, superintendent of HCDE. “These labs open a new world of possibilities in instruction for teachers and prepare students for the world they will live in tomorrow.”

The original eight Volkswagen eLabs officially opened in August of 2017. Since then, more than 1,500 HCDE students have had the opportunity to learn and explore areas of STEM previously unavailable to them. HCDE teachers have logged more than 4,000 person hours of training and 88 percent indicate that students who have meaningful experiences in Volkswagen eLabs are more engaged in their work in traditional classes.

“In less than a single year, we’ve launched 16 digital fabrication labs. In fact, by Aug. 1, there will be more digital fabrication labs in Hamilton County Schools than in any other school district in the world. That’s amazing.  But what is every bit as amazing are the solutions our students are developing to solve real world problems: Can you create a water filtration system that does not require electricity?  Can you build a drone delivery system that is not dependent on a landing pad?  Can you create a prosthetic device that enables an animal that’s lost a limb to still be able to run?  All of this, thanks to an extraordinary partnership between Volkswagen, HCDE, the State of Tennessee, and PEF," said PEF President Dr. Dan Challener.

The program is administered in partnership with the Public Education Foundation (PEF), an independent nonprofit organization that provides training, research and resources to teachers, principals and schools in Hamilton County.  Michael Stone, PEF Director of Innovative Learning,  will continue to help equip the Volkswagen eLabs as well as design and lead the professional learning of the educators in the newly- announced labs.

Students, with support of the Volkswagen eLab specialists and teachers, have embarked on new projects through the empowerment of the eLabs. Students designed and 3D printed orthopedic devices for people and pets with special needs. Seven of the eight labs successfully launched student-run entrepreneurial ventures dubbed Ed Corps in partnership with Real World Scholars, a nonprofit e-commerce platform that allows teachers to operate a classroom-based business. Students from the Volkswagen eLab at the Howard School and Red Bank High School partnered with students from the Fab Lab at STEM School Chattanooga to pioneer HCDE’s first multi-campus, international, project-based learning unit. Students worked with the Global Institute for Urban Mobility & Urban Planning, which aims to eliminate mobility disparities and enhance urban living, to conduct research on the viability of highly autonomous electric vehicles in Chattanooga.

Christian Parker, eighth-grader at Sale Creek Middle/High, puts his robot built with salvaged computer parts through its paces.
Student Scene
Hamilton County 4-H Announces Results Of Countywide 4-H Demonstration Contest At UTC
  • 4/18/2024

Fourth and fifth grade students from across Hamilton County gathered at the UTC University Center on March 24 for the 2024 Hamilton County 4-H Demonstration Contest. More than 70 first-place ... more

Cleveland State Provides HVAC Bootcamp
Cleveland State Provides HVAC Bootcamp
  • 4/18/2024

Cleveland State Community College Workforce Development provided a HVAC Bootcamp this month in the Cleveland State HVAC Lab at the Partners in Industry and Education (PIE) Center in Cleveland. ... more

Lee Student Receives Prestigious 2024 Goldwater Scholarship
Lee Student Receives Prestigious 2024 Goldwater Scholarship
  • 4/17/2024

Lee University's Ethan Ramey, a junior biology major with ecology/environmental emphasis, has received the national Goldwater Scholarship, awarded to college students who intend to pursue research ... more