The K-12 InVenture Prize/Georgia AIM project at Georgia Tech was awarded a $25,000 E2 Energy to Educate Grant from Constellation Energy Corporation that will bring solar robot cars to schools in rural parts of the state.
Members of the Georgia AIM team traveled to Thomasville to meet with local partners, manufacturers, and business leaders to discuss AI impact.
Since the Mock Pitch review process is online and asynchronous, judges can complete the pitches whenever they have free time.
Teams from Georgia Tech and Southern Regional Technical College (SRTC) are working together to synthesize the results of a recent workshop with teachers, business, and community leaders in Thomasville Georgia.
Georgia AIM will support a total of nine inter-related projects throughout the state and is designed to increase job and wage opportunities in distressed and rural communities and among historically underrepresented and underserved people.
On March 15, student inventors from across the state gathered on Georgia Tech's campus to participate in the K-12 InVenture Prize State Finals.
Published by Scholastic Teaching Resources, the book shows teachers how to have more impact on their students by leaning in, establishing implicit understanding, tackling emotionality, transforming culture, looking around, and creating experiences.
2016 Georgia Tech K-12 InVenture Challenge Award Winners
The AEF Program has been running for 30 years and provides accomplished K-12 educators in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields with the chance to serve in the national education arena.
The 2021 K-12 InVenture Prize Competition welcomed 77 participating teams to present their unique projects and design-based solutions.