Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Florida teens offer after-school lessons

- By Marlene Sokol ©2022 Tampa Bay Times. Visit tampabay.com. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

It is, some of the teens say, a high point in their week.

They arrive at 4 p.m. on a Friday at Seminole Elementary School lugging pennies, disposable baking pans and rolls of thin aluminum file.

They are Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate students at Hillsborou­gh High School, which means their life is often a stress bath. Describing one of the day’s IB exams, student Crystal Cooper says, “that was the easiest test we had yet,” and the others just roll their eyes.

They get busy tearing off squares of foil. About 20 minutes later, 25 elementary students file in.

It’s Science Buddies day. There is a national nonprofit organizati­on called Science Buddies, but this club has nothing to do with it and its founder says the name was coincident­al. Shloke Patel, a senior with his eye on a career in biological engineerin­g, launched the local program two years ago along with several of his Hillsborou­gh IB classmates.

Seminole Elementary was eager to sign on, said physical education teacher Tyler Marsh, who is also lead teacher of the Hillsborou­gh Out of School Time program. They had been trying to make the program less of a babysittin­g service and more of an extension of the school day, staffed with school employees and consistent with school culture.

When Patel and his

friends enlisted Hillsborou­gh physics teacher Neal Mobley as their faculty sponsor, Mobley said, “I was a little unsure about what they had planned. Were they going to take field trips? It sounded like a lot of paperwork. Then a few months went by and I got busy.”

He checked in with the students, “and, lo and behold, they had been doing it all along.”

Not all outside programs are welcomed by Seminole’s after-school children.

But the kids do appreciate

the group from Hillsborou­gh High. “They jump in and love interactin­g with the high school kids,” Marsh said. “They’re not just there to get community service hours. They actually enjoy it, and the kids know it. Kids see through fakeness.”

The IB students have kept Science Buddies going despite the disruption­s caused by the pandemic and other, smaller glitches. Patel remembers a day when they had planned an egg-drop experiment. On the way to Seminole, someone accidental­ly

dropped and broke all the eggs. They had to stretch out the explanator­y part of the lesson while somebody bought more eggs.

One recent day, they showed the kids how to make little boats from their foil squares for an activity about gravity and buoyancy. A few boats disintigra­ted into shards of thin foil, while others looked more like square box lids and a few resembled actual boats. “Now we’re going to put in a bowl of water and it

see how many pennies it can hold,” IB student Aidan John told the children.

Water spilled and shards of foil littered the cafeteria tables. Some boats held 100 pennies or more. Parents arrived in the middle of the activity to retrieve their children. The teens adjusted by bumping those students up in line.

The prize for the winner: Cookies from a supermarke­t bakery box.

For the other students — also cookies.

IB programs have service hour requiremen­ts on top of the community service students perform to earn Bright Future scholarshi­ps. But senior Akshat Guduru said, “Honestly, I just do this for fun.”

Some described a sense of relief when they step into the school, a way to recapture the wonder they felt in their own early science fair years before downshifti­ng into a weekend that likely includes school work. They are so pleased with the experience that they are writing up some of the activities and will make them available to district elementary science teachers.

Despite his other career plans, Patel said he has not ruled out becoming a teacher at some point. Mobley is something of a role model, as he entered teaching after prior careers as a Naval officer and then an attorney.

No one can measure the effect Science Buddies has on the Seminole children’s academic performanc­e. It may or may not be a factor in students’ passing rates on the state science exam, which rose from 38 to 48 percent between 2021 and 2022.

In general, Mobley said, “simple science activities can teach things that are worth knowing in science class. I hope some of it sticks with them.”

 ?? MARLENE SOKOL/TNS ?? Students from Hillsborou­gh High School’s Science Buddies service club work with kids at Seminole Elementary School to see how many pennies they can support with aluminum foil boats on Oct. 7.
MARLENE SOKOL/TNS Students from Hillsborou­gh High School’s Science Buddies service club work with kids at Seminole Elementary School to see how many pennies they can support with aluminum foil boats on Oct. 7.

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