• Donate Now
  • The NM Political Report
    • logo
    • The NM Political Report
    • About
      • About
      • Our Team
      • Donate
      • Send us a Tip

    The NM Political Report - New Mexico's best political reporting. Period.

    The NM Political Report (https://nmpoliticalreport.com/2018/04/20/competition-fosters-computer-skills-in-new-mexico-schools/)

    • News
    • COVID-19 coverage
    • Environmental Project
    • Elections
    • Donate
    • Republish our Stories
    April 20, 2018
    Melrose

    Competition fosters computer skills in New Mexico schools

    By Anthony Moreno, KRWG and High Country News | April 20, 2018

    This story is part of the State of Change project, produced in partnership with the Solutions Journalism Network.

    In New Mexico, computer science courses are not mandated by the state. Many schools in metropolitan areas offer these courses, but few rural school districts do. However, one rural school district has turned to New Mexico’s Supercomputing Challenge, an annual science and engineering competition, to offer computer science education.

    Melrose, New Mexico, may be small, but that hasn’t stopped its school from competing in the competition.

    This story originally appeared at High Country News and is reprinted with permission.

    For nearly a year, teams of students here in grades six through 12 have met after school to take part in a challenge trying to solve problems using computational thinking.

    After school on a Monday night, sisters Lily and Heidi Macfarlane, along with their sixth-grade classmate Eojhan Knight, reviewed comments from a recent presentation of their project, which they say could help crop dusters improve safety and efficiency.

    These students had to understand how to use a program to write code to solve problems, which for some students, like Lily Macfarlane, took time.

    “We had no idea what to do for the NetLogo and that was just the start of it. We had to do the codes, and we had to make a model for it on the computer. I didn’t even know how to operate a computer and that was pretty weird cause I’m in this grade,” she says.

    Macfarlane says understanding how to code and learn computational thinking is just like getting to know people.

    “You know how you make a new best friend, then you finally see what they’re thinking and what they might think — it’s kind of like that with a computer.”

    Listen to the audio version of this story:

    For over sixteen years, Melrose municipal schools have set aside funding and students have worked concessions to be able to pay for teams taking part in the challenge. Nearly a decade ago, a Melrose team even won the state competition. It was a big win for a school district that doesn’t offer computer science classes. This after-school activity is pretty much their only option, according to Superintendent Jaime Widner.

    “We don’t have a computer science class per se, but our science teacher takes care of that, Alan Daugherty, and kids get an opportunity to code, and program computers based on something that they see a need for, and it gives them the opportunity to see things that they wouldn’t get if he didn’t do that program.”

    After a full day of teaching science classes to middle- and high-schoolers and driving bus routes, Alan Daugherty, or “Mr. D,” returns to school to help Melrose students in the supercomputing challenge. Daugherty says he took computer science courses while in college at New Mexico State University. But to help prepare students for the competition, he also completed supercomputing challenge training and took advantage of the University of New Mexico’s career development program “CS For All.”

    “It’s given (our kids) the chance to get some entry-level computer science skills and that’s something that we wouldn’t be able to offer here otherwise,” says Daugherty.

    During the last ten years, jobs in computer science have grown in the United States. A 2017 Department of Labor Statistics report showed 3.9 million people were employed in the industry in 2015, up from 3.2 million in 2009.

    To help prepare students to fill these jobs, some states have unveiled more computer science learning opportunities in schools. However, New Mexico does not have an official state plan for K-12 computer science standards. It does not require high schools to offer computer science courses or mandate that students can take computer science courses for math or science credit. States nearby, like Colorado, are working to adopt computer science standards, and Texas requires that all high schools offer computer science classes.

    So, does this supercomputing challenge help fill voids that exist in New Mexico when it comes to computer science education? Challenge Director David Kratzer says it can, and it also works to provide outreach programs to a younger group of students to address the wide gender gap in computer science jobs.

    “We realized that we need to get kids interested at third-, fourth-, fifth-grade level and then we won’t have this disparity in our gender gap,” says Kratzer.

    Kratzer says over 11,000 students have participated in the challenge, and many of them have received college scholarships and gone on to successful careers. In 2003, he did an analysis at Los Alamos National Labs and found that 100 employees out of around 10,000 were challenge alumni.

    Students from rural communities have used the challenge to find success. Marisol Gamboa is the oldest child of immigrants from Salem, New Mexico. She’s a computer scientist and division leader at a national lab in California. She has over 17 years of experience in her field. While attending Hatch Valley Public Schools in the early 1990s, Gamboa was encouraged by a teacher to take part in the challenge. She says her school didn’t even own a computer and she had to log in from a “dummy terminal” to a supercomputer at Los Alamos to work on the project.

    “I absolutely would not have had any exposure to computers until I would have been in college,” says Gamboa.

    Gamboa says her successful participation with the challenge helped her land multiple scholarships to the University of New Mexico. She says her scholarship funding was large enough to also cover her younger sister’s tuition for a couple of years. In addition, she was able to help her parents buy a larger home with her starting salary at IBM a couple of years after graduation. Many of her siblings went on to higher education and great careers.

    However, Gamboa says the challenge is not a panacea for the lack of computer science opportunities in rural areas due to the high poverty rate across New Mexico.

    “Extracurricular programs like New Mexico Supercomputer (Challenge) cannot fill the gap due to most students not participating in those programs — because they are out helping support their families.”

    Watch a video version of this story:

    In Melrose, scholarships have attracted students to the program. Alan Daugherty says every senior who completes the supercomputing challenge has received a college scholarship.

    “Essentially all of my seniors that have gone through the program have got some scholarship help, ranging from $500 to $1,000 up to several thousands of dollars each,” he says.

    Daugherty says as long as students want to take part in the challenge, he’s willing to take the time to do what he can to help them.

    “In the little schools it always seems there’s a whole lot to do and not a whole lot of people to do it. So, everyone has to chip in and do what they can, and the kids enjoy this and as long as they are happy with it, I enjoy working with them and helping them out with it.”

    With the help of the program, and “Mr. D,” these kids in this small village of just over 700 will see if their projects find success in the supercomputing challenge, an experience that may lead to college and a career in the field.

    Anthony Moreno is the news director at KRWG in Las Cruces, New Mexico.

    Share this:

    • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
    • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
    • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)
    • Click to print (Opens in new window)
    • More
    • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
    • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)

    Related

    • More About
    • Quick Reads
    • Guv talks about New Mexico reproductive rights with Biden

      Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and other Democratic governors met virtually with President Joe Biden on Friday to discuss what Democratic-led states are doing to protect abortion rights. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled last week to overturn Roe v. Wade, ending the federal constitutional right to abortion care.

    • Grant County chooses not to renew contract with federal wildlife killing agency
    • Biden amends disaster declaration for wildfire, increasing time for NM to receive federal assistance

    View all Quick Reads articles →

    Previous article
    Gubernatorial candidate Steve Pearce on the environment
    Next article
    Pope prompts talk about abortion, women's roles in the church

    Join the Conversation on Twitter

    My Tweets

    Newsroom

    • U.S. Supreme Court says Biden has authority to end anti-immigration policy
      By Susan Dunlap | 14 hours ago

      The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that President Joe Biden has the authority to end the Trump-era immigration policy forbidding asylum seekers from entering the U.S. On its final day of the 2020-2021 term, the Supreme Court agreed with Biden in Biden v. Texas that he has the authority to end former President Donald Trump’s “Remain in Mexico” policy, also known as the Migration Protection Protocols.

    • New Mexico’s Paid Sick Leave law goes into effect
      By Susan Dunlap | 14 hours ago

      A group of legislators, advocates and individuals celebrated the start of New Mexico’s Paid Sick Leave law, which officially starts Friday.

    • U.S. Supreme Court ruling ‘a huge blow’ to efforts to combat climate change
      By Hannah Grover | 22 hours ago

      A U.S. Supreme Court decision issued Thursday limits the ability for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to implement measures to combat climate change.  In a 6-3 ruling, the high court ruled that Congress did not give the EPA the authority to devise emission caps “based on the generation shifting approach the Agency took in the Clean Power Plan” when it passed the Clean Air Act.

    #NMLEG

    • Weather station network intended to provide some security for farmers, ranchers
      By Hannah Grover | May 2, 2022

      Government programs provide insurance for ranchers if they lose their forage crops due to lack of rain, but the scarcity of rain gauges in New Mexico has limited the usefulness of this insurance, according to legislators who secured funding to build a network of weather stations throughout the state.

    • Rail Runner funding removed from junior spending bill
      By Hannah Grover | April 6, 2022

      The Rail Runner will not be receiving $1 million to temporarily reduce fares to riders.

    Recent Posts

    • Guv talks about New Mexico reproductive rights with Biden

      Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and other Democratic governors met virtually with President Joe Biden on Friday to discuss what Democratic-led states are doing to protect abortion rights.

    • PRC accuses PNM of misleading regulators, requires utility to issue rate credits upon San Juan unit closures

      While accusing the state’s largest electric utility of purposefully misleading regulators, the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission ordered the Public Service Company of New Mexico (PNM) to issue rate credits to customers upon the closure of each remaining unit of the San Juan Generating Station.

    • Grant County chooses not to renew contract with federal wildlife killing agency

      A rural county in the heart of wolf country chose not to renew a contract with the federal agency tasked with killing carnivores that are deemed problematic.

    © Copyright 2015-2022, NM Political Report

    This site built with Project Largo from INN and proudly powered by WordPress.

    Back to top ↑

    Follow

    Melrose Anthony Moreno, KRWG and High Country News