"Power your school:” Working with Dallas-Fort Worth schools to identify alternative energies for their campus

Date
March 21, 2022


K-12 curricula worldwide typically lack a strong emphasis on alternative energies, particularly solar and wind power. To counter this, the University of Cambridge has developed the “Power your School” initiative, a program where students learn to map their school and local area, predict where the best sites for solar panels may be on their campus, use scientific equipment accurately, record results, and make ideal recommendations based on their data. TCU Chemistry Club and the Coffer Research Lab have partnered with this initiative to help local elementary schools investigate the benefits of renewable energy, assist in calculating the financial benefits of solar panels over a span of multiple years, and most importantly - to help young students learn the basics of proper recording of scientific data. Through poster creation and its subsequent presentation, students also use design and oral communication skills to educate local officials (and beyond) into the benefits of investing in renewable energy. Methods and results of this project will be presented.

Related Products

Thumbnail for Toxic fashion: Uncovering the chemical truth behind fast fashion | Poster Board #612
Toxic fashion: Uncovering the chemical truth behind fast fashion | Poster Board #612
Fast fashion is a high-level contributor to industrial wastewater, contaminating water with harmful dyes and synthetic clothing materials…
Thumbnail for Pyclen macrocycle release from mesoporous silica as a drug carrier and impact on amyloid beta-peptide aggregation | Poster Board #1002
Pyclen macrocycle release from mesoporous silica as a drug carrier and impact on amyloid beta-peptide aggregation | Poster Board #1002
Metal Chelation Therapy is being touted as a possible treatment for Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). In this regard, one emerging class of ligands are pyclens, with a diverse span of steric and electronic tunability possible…
Thumbnail for Successful Student Chapters:
Successful Student Chapters:
: [CHED] Division of Chemical Education