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Four Corners spices up Science Night with rockets, egg drop – Superior Telegram


SUPERIOR — Curiosity took flight at Four Corners Elementary School during science night on Tuesday, May 23.

Hand-built paper rockets soared into the sky propelled by air; eggs cocooned in bubble wrap, rubber bands and paper packaging plunged from an East Central Energy bucket truck to the ground; children mixed handfuls of sparkling slime; they hammered together wooden projects; and they dug trenches through sand to help rubber ducks travel downstream.

Mason Nollet, 9, hammers together a wooden aquarium project with help from an employee of Home Depot during science night at Four Corners Elementary School on Tuesday, May 23. Home Depot donated 150 kits, including aquariums and bird houses with swimming pools, for the event.

Maria Lockwood / Superior Telegram

“It’s a great success,” said family engagement coordinator Ellen Chicka. “We had over 200-225 people register for this event, and we only have 191 kids, so over half our kids registered to come, which is awesome.”

In front of the school, free bike helmets were handed out and fitted to students by volunteer firefighters from the towns of Superior and Oakland. Chicka received a $2,250 grant from Essentia Health to purchase helmets for every student at the school. The children rode through a bike rodeo course laid out by Douglas County Sheriff Matt Izzard and some of the office’s deputies.

“The kids usually love the squad cars. It’s good to get back out in the neighborhood,” Izzard said.

Luciana Ranelli, education coordinator with the Lake Superior National Estuarine Research Reserve, agreed.

“I just think it’s important to meet people where they are at — their community sites and at school — and so we were excited to get the invitation out to Four Corners,” she said.

Lineman lifts bucket of bucket truck

A lineman from East Central Energy lifts the bucket up during science night at Four Corners Elementary School on Tuesday, May 23. He dropped eggs that had been safety packaged by the students from the bucket, one by one. Many survived the fall.

Maria Lockwood / Superior Telegram

While the NERR is focused more on the St. Louis River area, the rural school is within the watershed.

“Kids out here really know water and know what it means, so it’s important to be out here,” Ranelli said.

Superior Middle School STEM teacher Mike Schlangen helped students create and launch paper rockets with an air compressor apparatus. It’s an end of the year activity that seventh grade students enjoy.

The Four Corners students were doing great, he said.

“It’s kind of fun because you can build it a million different ways, and they’re all having fun no matter if it goes 20 feet or it goes 100 feet. They just get to push the button,” Schlangen said.

Two Superior High School students — Lily and Zakk Holmquist — and their grandmother Chris Bay helped children and their families select and water free plants, donated by Missinne Greenhouse and Landscape to take home. The three live close to the school and have deep roots there. Lily and Zakk’s mother attended the school when it was first built.

“It’s a very local school, community-oriented, community-based,” Bay said.

The science night was put on by the Four Corners PTA and Chicka.

“We try to do fun things for the kids every year,” said PTA president Chelsea Rasmussen.

Funding from the PTA helped pay for food and supplies, and community partners like Missinne’s, Home Depot, East Central Energy and Essentia Health pitched in to ensure everything was free for families.

Rasmussen said they threw a hodgepodge of activities together. The result was, scientifically speaking, a success.

“I like the variety, so I think everybody is finding something that makes them happy. Some kids are outside biking and some kids are building, so it’s great,” Chicka said.

Lineman drops egg from bucket truck

A lineman with East Central Energy drops an egg packaged in protective layers by a student from the elevated bucket of a bucket truck during science night at Four Corners Elementary School on Tuesday, May 23.

Maria Lockwood / Superior Telegram

Little girls smiles while holding up an egg

Rees Compton, 7, grins as she holds up the egg she packaged for the egg drop during science night at Four Corners Elementary School on Tuesday, May 23. It survived a fall from the bucket of the East Central Energy truck. The first grader said she used bubble wrap and tape to protect the egg from the fall.

Maria Lockwood / Superior Telegram

Children use shovels to dig a path in the dirt

Hudson Bonneville, 3, and his sister Harper Bonneville, 4, dig a path through sand for a rubber duck to travel down at the Lake Superior National Estuarine Research Reserve table during science night at Four Corners Elementary School on Tuesday, May 23. When they tilted the table and poured water on it, the duck made it to the bottom.

Maria Lockwood / Superior Telegram

Crowd watches paper rocket

Parents and children watch as a paper rocket shoots into the sky powered by an air compressor apparatus adapted by Superior Middle School STEM teacher Mike Schlangen, second from right. Children built their own rockets at Four Corners Elementary on Tuesday, May 23. Some soared as far as the road in front of the school; others didn’t make it off the launch pad.

Maria Lockwood / Superior Telegram

Crowd watches as egg falls from bucket truck

Four Corners families watch the bucket of the East Central Energy bucket truck lift as they wait for the egg drop during science night on Tuesday, May 23.

Maria Lockwood / Superior Telegram

Firefighter fits bike helmet onto boy

Brett Uchanski with the Town of Superior Volunteer Fire Department, right, fits a bike helmet on Casey Hand, 7, while other students ride through a bike rodeo course behind them during science night at Four Corners Elementary School on Tuesday, May 23. The school purchased free bike helmets for every student at the school with a grant from Essentia Health.

Maria Lockwood / Superior Telegram

Boy and his mom build aquarium together

Evan Smith, 6, and his mother, Crystal Smith, build an aquarium together during science night at Four Corners Elementary School on Tuesday, May 23.

Maria Lockwood / Superior Telegram

Boy prepares to pour water on table to see if rubber duck will float to other side

Jackson Saunders, 6, prepares to pour water on a water table to see if the rubber duck will travel to the other side. He placed sticks and plants in front of the duck to try to keep it in place. It was one of two activity tables set up by the Lake Superior National Estuarine Research Reserve during science night at Four Corners Elementary School on Tuesday, May 23.

Maria Lockwood / Superior Telegram

Maria Lockwood covers news in Douglas County, Wisconsin, for the Superior Telegram.





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