Fourth-grade students Jayce Newman and Aiden Schissler control a computer's arrow keys with wired sticks of celery, part of a project to teach students about electrical circuits. (Photos by Jonathan Simmons.)
Teacher Andrea Tosi and sxth-grader Ty Jurgensen show first-grader Moriah Canady how to use computer controls that have been electrically wired to sticks of celery so that they carry out commands when the sticks are pressed.
Sixth-grader Abigail Lee said the Rube Goldberg machine she'd helped build in teacher David Madzunovic's class takes several minutes to set up for each run.
Belle Terre Principal Terence Culver held a ribbon cutting during the iRECS Expo for the school's new iPad lab, called the FLOAT lab, which has 22 iPads as well as a large screen TV and a selection educational software programs.
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Belle Terre students show off science, engineering projects