Rebane's Ruminations
March 2011
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George Rebane

Earlier this week Nevada Union High School hosted the second preparatory seminar held this year for Nevada County high school students planning to take TechTest2011.  TechTest is the annual merit scholarship exam given to qualified seniors and juniors who are headed toward technical careers.   This year’s TT2011 will be given on 26 March from 9AM to 1PM in the NUHS Science Lecture Hall.

Now in its fifth year, the test is written at a level of difficulty that science/math students may expect in their undergraduate lower division years at a first rate research university.  It is intended to exercise ‘out of the box’ problem set-up and solution skills that students will encounter in their higher education and on the job.  The test is administered and graded by Nevada County high school teachers under the direction of NUHS physics teacher Mr John McDaniel who heads the TT Academic Committee.  Scholarships totaling about $15,000 are awarded strictly on the basis of test scores with the top three scorers getting $6K, $4K, $2K respectively.  The next ten highest scores each receive $300.

TT2010prob6 

The annual test is sponsored by the Sierra Environmental Studies Foundation (www.sesfoundation.org) a 501c3 organization, and the scholarship fund is made up of contributions by private individuals, county businesses, and SESF members.  As SESF’s Director of Research, I have had the privilege of writing the tests.  A typical problem (from TT2010) is shown in the above figure.

In these preparatory seminars we go over test taking strategies that will serve the students throughout their educational years, cover critical thinking tools and technical approaches that are not usually taught in high school, and work out example problems from previous TTs.  All previous TT copies along with solution keys are available for download from the SESF website.

This year about fifty students attended the two preparatory seminars.  These are fun sessions where talk often overlaps into student science projects and workplace situations encountered by scientists and engineers.  For me and other SESF members it has been an honor to work with Nevada County’s crème de la crème science and math students who are the new generation that will keep America competitive in world markets and create new industries to employ the country’s workers.

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6 responses to “TechTest2011 Preparations”

  1. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    George, good job. It appears however you have stirred up thr big rent seeker from Truckee. He is calling you a hypocrite over on Russ’s blog. I guwess a APPLE not successful in growing worms is the same as testing kids for th fture. I knew the liberal mind was vacant and StevieF proves it once again.

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  2. George Rebane Avatar

    Thanks for the heads up Todd. I read SteveF’s comments on NCMW. Oh my!
    I do feel that he is either mentally ill, or if that kind of reasoning is still considered sane by some, then the Great Divide is inevitable.
    Many of us continue to believe that the great American experiment on self governance can succeed, but only to the extent that there is some cohesion in the beliefs of the cohort that seeks to do so. Two generations now removed from the start of Great Society has created a schism the effects of which are a tremendous burden to both sides.

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  3. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    What is fascinating to me is the self destructive behavior regarding freedom I see in people like Frisch and Pelline. They beat the drum loudly for the the protesters in the middle east yet denigrate the Tea Party. There has to be a disconnect in their brains, I can’t come up with another explanation. SBC is using itself as a propaganda tool as I read the article they sent to the Union regarding their “education” workshops in Auburn. I would like to know who funds that, they are even paying room and board apparently. The ploy is “climate change” and of course the ubiquitous, environmental issues of the Sierra’s.

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  4. Kim Pruett Avatar
    Kim Pruett

    Hi George,
    I want to say Thank you and all who are involved for all with SESF Tech Test I have attended the breakfasts the last two years and am so incredibly impressed with the students. They are the best of the best in Nevada County. I think your organization has the largest scholarship given at NU and the focus on science and engeneering is great. I am encouraging my two daughters Lilly and Maggie to explore math and science, Maggie in particular has a natural love of science. Let us know how we can help, would love to attend the breakfast again this year.

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  5. George Rebane Avatar

    Thank you for the kind words Kim. You are definitely invited to attend our annual breakfast which I think will again be in May.

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  6. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    Here’s some interesting slideware from the chemistry side of the aisle regarding math competency required for early chem classes.
    http://www.chemreview.net/bccePost.pdf
    Locally, the Grass Valley School District jumped off the NCTM (Nat’l Council of Teachers of Mathematics, a fuzzy, faddish group) cliff circa 1994, adopting the disastrous California frameworks based on the ’89 NCTM non-standards (standards for how math was to be taught, not standards on what kids should learn). The Nevada City elementary schools didn’t drink as much of the koolaid, and Pleasant Ridge spit out their early sip before it did any damage.
    To give you an idea how bad the NCTM aligned curriculums were, my son’s grade 1 class at Hennessey School (a “California Distinguished School”) was the first where all kids were getting “Mathland”, with calculators on the desks of the 1st graders and lots of coloring assignments in their math workbooks. When the state finally got their ass in gear with standardized testing, when those kids were at the end of the 3rd grade, half of all the Hennessey 3rd graders were in the BOTTOM quartile.
    NUHS instituted an intro exam for Geometry X mainly to weed out Lyman Gilmore students not ready for any real rigor, despite high grades, as a result.

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