Geil student Sam Barrett and Lincoln student Kael Ramirez test out the laparoscopic surgery simulation.
OLIVIA WIESELER/Gering Courier
Geil students Kenzie Trautman, Brandon Trautman and Parker Zabel work together to attempt to color a piece of paper inside the box while only looking it through a camera. The simulation represents a laparoscopic surgery.
OLIVIA WIESELER/Gering Courier
HAL coordinator Angela Morris helps out Geil students Mia Moreno (left) and Gabriela Avita in their laparoscopic surgery activity.
OLIVIA WIESELER/Gering Courier
Gering elementary students who are a part of the High Ability Learners program participated in a STEM day at the high school on Monday, March 22. One of the activities was to engineer and build a model Eiffel Tower out of different craft supplies.
For most third, fourth and fifth graders, coloring inside the lines isn’t too much of a challenge. But when you attach a marker to the end of a stick, put it through a box and are only allowed to look at the paper you are coloring on via a camera someone else is holding inside the box, it gets a little more complicated.
Geil students Kenzie Trautman, Brandon Trautman and Parker Zabel work together to attempt to color a piece of paper inside the box while only looking it through a camera. The simulation represents a laparoscopic surgery.
Gering elementary students who are a part of the High Ability Learners program participated in a STEM day at the high school on Monday, March 22. One of the activities was to engineer and build a model Eiffel Tower out of different craft supplies.