The Commercial Appeal

Toyota endowment funds school initiative

Lee, Pontotoc, Union students to benefit

- Associated Press

TUPELO, Miss. — Students in Lee, Pontotoc and Union counties will have a chance this fall to learn how to fly a plane, program industrial robots or dig into health care careers.

The Toyota Wellspring Education Fund will offer three new dual- enrollment courses next school year designed to prepare students for in-demand profession­s. They are open to juniors and seniors at the 14 public high schools in those three counties.

“It is a tremendous opportunit­y,” said Charles Garrett, a senior consultant with the CREATE Foundation, which oversees the fund. “It is more and more important that people get an education or training that will help them have a successful lifestyle.”

Courses include an introducti­on to aviation, a look at the fundamenta­ls of robotics and a survey of health care careers. They will all be hybrids, with instructio­n offered both online and in person. Each will have space for about 15 to 20 pupils, who can sign up through their school counselors. Students who complete each course will earn three hours of college credit.

The fund was created by a $50 million endow- ment from Toyota to support education in the three counties that worked together to bring the automaker to Blue Springs. It is administer­ed by an advisory committee and designed to be an enhancemen­t, providing opportunit­ies to the group that individual schools would be unable to provide alone.

Twenty-two students recently completed the first course funded by the endowment — a class on Web app entreprene­urship taught by six faculty members from Mississipp­i State University. Students made their final presentati­ons April 12 at

the Toyota facility, where the class met on Saturdays throughout the semester.

“What we’ve seen is an example of what is possible to enhance educationa­l experience­s for our students and to provide tangible real-world experience­s of what students might choose to do,” said CREATE president Mike Clayborne.

The aviation class will be taught by Hinds Community College’s Randy Pearcy. Students will receive five hours of actual f light instructio­n in a Cessna 172 aircraft — which they and an instructor will schedule at the Tupelo Airport. They also will learn about operating unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones, a skill expected to be in high demand in the near future.

Itawamba Community College will offer the robotics class, where students will learn how to program i ndustrial robots and use the tools of advanced manufactur­ing. ICC dean of career and technical i nstruction Tony Tice said the course could capture those who show an i nterest in high school robotics.

“Their high school instructor­s will teach the basics of elementary robotics, and when we get them, we want to show them what is out there in industry,” he said.

The health care course combines online classes through Northeast Community College and job shadowing days at North Mississipp­i Medical Center. It will cover different health care fields, the educationa­l requiremen­ts, workplace demands and expected salaries, as well as the U. S. health care system and the forces that shape it.

Meanwhile, students who completed t he Web app class learned not only programmin­g but also marketing and branding. They designed apps that helped solve school nurse shortages, supplement­ed school announceme­nts, allowed teachers and students to connect, provided campus guides for freshmen and helped tally votes in student elections, among other functions.

“That was the tool we used to teach entreprene­urship,” said Rodney Pearson, professor of business informatio­n systems at Mississipp­i State.

Before designing their programs, groups had to conduct market research with students and teachers at their schools, said Allison Pearson, Rodney’s wife and a professor of management at Mississipp­i State.

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