Students find sky-high excitement with 香港六合彩官网资料 drone center

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
Sept. 2, 2022

The room at Delta Junction Junior High School would look busy even without the nine students zipping around. The buzz from the kids just added to that busy-ness.

Nick Adkins easily got their attention, however. He was visiting to teach them some things about drones 鈥 and not only the small quad-copters these kids are familiar with.

Nick Adkins and students
Photo by Rod Boyce
Nick Adkins explains the parts of a drone and its flight capabilities to Delta Junction students. School librarian Norm Cosgrove, who teaches the weeklong summer school drones class, listens.

Adkins is operations director of the Alaska Center for Unmanned Aircraft Systems Integration at the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute. His visit to the Delta school 鈥 home of the Grizzlies 鈥 was part of ACUASI鈥檚 effort to get young people interested in science, technology, engineering and math.

Adkins, usually with another ACUASI team member, has traveled throughout Alaska on the center鈥檚 outreach mission. 

Delta Junction is just one of many stops on Adkins鈥 flight path. He has made several trips to Galena, a Yukon River community 270 miles east of Fairbanks and off the road system. He visited with students at the local district鈥檚 Sidney C. Huntington School and with those of the Galena Interior Learning Academy, which attracts students from around Alaska.

Adkins has also made repeat visits to Camp Fire Alaska, 750 miles south of Fairbanks at Cooper Landing on the Kenai Peninsula, and talked with students in Nenana, about an hour drive southwest of Fairbanks. He also hopes to visit Nulato, a community downriver from Galena.

鈥淭he real fun is seeing that light bulb go on,鈥 Adkins said. 鈥淵ou see a child who really hasn鈥檛 been exposed to things like this, and you give them this drone to build with these tiny, frustrating parts, and they just seem to shine. And all of a sudden this child has got all these pieces and parts in front of them, and the next thing, you know, they鈥檝e got a flying drone. 

鈥淵ou see them realize that they just found something they're good at and that they didn't know they were good at it, because maybe they didn't grow up in a family that works on things,鈥 he said. 鈥淧eople grow up in different ways.鈥

The students ACUASI reaches today can be on the path to a job in the blossoming field of commercial drones, Adkins said. He mentioned his visit to Galena as an example. 

Drone closeup
Photo by Rod Boyce
Students get hands-on activity at an education outreach session at Delta Junction Junior High School in July. Here, two students reassemble a drone that Adkins has taken apart.

鈥淭hese kids are 14 and 15 years old, and they have a real chance of working in the drone industry when they get out,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here's a young man there who was going to graduate with his drone pilot鈥檚 license. I could have hired him directly out of high school.鈥

For four days in mid-July, Delta junior high librarian Norm Cosgrove was running a summer school session about drones.

On day No. 2, Cosgrove turned over the school鈥檚 Creative Cafe to Adkins. The Creative Cafe is a single expansive room that houses the library, art classes and the innovation station, which includes a 3D printer and Cricut cutting machines.

Before setting the students loose on the drone flight simulators on two laptops, Adkins walked them through the training and regulation side. It鈥檚 not as flashy as a simulator or handling a small drone, but the students 鈥 seated on and around a couch 鈥 knew they needed to pay attention. Hands often went in the air when Adkins asked a question or talked about what they needed to learn to pass the Federal Aviation Administration鈥檚 test for recreational drone pilots.

There鈥檚 more to this summertime learning about drones than just drones. Cosgrove said that, although the days of learning about drones feels like a camp, it鈥檚 considered actual summer school because the curriculum contains math, reading and writing.

Students on flight simulator
By Rod Boyce
Two Delta Junction students use the drone flight simulator that Nick Adkins brings on his education outreach trips.

Cosgrove also runs the school鈥檚 Flight Club, which got started after a student came to him in 2011 for help assembling a drone that was a Christmas present. 

鈥淲e鈥檝e been involved with ACUASI for quite a few years,鈥 Cosgrove said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great for these kids to actually see what drones can do and the careers that are possible with drones.鈥

Cosgrove pointed to one of the students.

鈥淭he young gentleman here is planning on using drones at his family鈥檚 farm,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese are 12- and 13-year-old kids thinking of ways to use this technology.鈥

Cosgrove also brings the students 鈥 those in the summer school as well as those in Flight Club 鈥 to ACUASI鈥檚 hangar on the East Ramp of Fairbanks International Airport. That鈥檚 where they can see ACUASI鈥檚 main aircraft: SeaHunter, with a 16-foot wingspan, and Sentry, with a wingspan of just under 13 feet. 

A visit to Fort Yukon, about 150 miles north of Fairbanks, showed an added benefit of ACUASI鈥檚 outreach: spending time separately with adults after working with the students.

鈥淲e stayed well into the evening so that the community could come in and see what we鈥檙e up to,鈥 Adkins said.

Funding for the outreach comes from the Federal Aviation Administration and from ACUASI. 

The FAA relies on partners to help spread the word about aviation, and one of those methods is the agency鈥檚 Science, Technology, Engineering and Math Aviation and Space Education Program.

ACUASI has its own reasons for wanting to connect with the public, especially young Alaskans.

鈥淲e want to provide value to the state of Alaska,鈥 Adkins said. 鈥淎re we working on an actual problem that needs to be solved, for example. We think large cargo delivery is a problem in Alaska. That鈥檚 what ACUASI has been focused on, and we think these students that we鈥檙e talking to can work in this industry.鈥

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Nick Adkins, ACUASI operations director, 907-455-2023, ncadkins@alaska.edu