![]() ![]() It's awesome," Coach and FCS teacher Christina Moales said.Ĭoach Leach Boyce shared similar sentiment, but added that students not only learned how to code quickly, now some of them code for fun outside of their meetings. So, they're growing in all kinds of ways. Some of the kids didn't even want to speak and they all spoke so well today. I mean, they work together so well and they grew a lot. "I just enjoyed watching the kids do their thing. Parents and coaches, Julia Van Volkenburg, Amie Marchesani, Leah Boyce and Christina Moales agreed that they have enjoyed watching the team learn and develop. They got another lesson on nuclear energy from Westinghouse Electric Corporate Nuclear Engineer Eric Hinkler during one of their meetings. Fun - I had lots of fun and made friends, too," RoboKnights team two member Aurelia Moales said.ĭuring their first semester in robotics, students took a field trip to the Tygart Valley River Dam where they learned about hydropower renewable energy. Teamwork - we always believe in each other to save the world. "Impact - we want to help support and make a difference in our communities. Each student came up with their statement to share about the projects. Monday, students shared how they incorporated the principles into their projects. Robotics includes six core principles - discovery, innovation, impact, fun, inclusion and teamwork. The "RoboKnights" are students Luca Beto, Serena Boyce, Izabella Charcandy, Landon Constabile, Rosie Lafferre, Nicholas Marchesani, Sofia Merriman, Cash Naternacola, David Van Volkenburg, Aurelia Moales, Arkham Neel and Anthony Pagliaro.ĭuring their presentations, students explained how their prototypes worked and what they learned during their meetings. ![]() I like coding and I like that we all have a job to do and we do it together," RoboKnights team two member Serena Boyce said. We all get together and learn new things. Both teams used block coding, which they learned over the past several months in their robotics team meetings. They focused on decreasing homelessness and obesity in Marion County, so they used kinetic energy from gym equipment. Byrd's Quinten Cooley.Team Two created a Lego gym prototype that produces enough electricity to power a homeless shelter. The rest of the all-conference second team includes Elkins' Tanner Miller, Grafton's Jacob Maier, Liberty's Jenson Dodd and Noah McKim, Lincoln's Brayden Edgell and David Burdette, Lewis County's Tanner Griffith, Philip Barbour's Kaden Humphreys and Robert C. ![]() North Marion's Preston Williams takes his spot on the second team after a season where the physical guard averaged 14.5 points, 8.1 rebounds and 3.7 assists per game on 45% shooting from the field and 37% shooting from 3.Įast Fairmont's Greyson Stewart split time as a starter or bench piece for the Bees, but was a scoring force no matter the circumstance, averaging 12.9 points and 5.4 rebounds a game while shooting 60% from the field. Grant averaged 1.9 steals, 2.8 rebounds and 2.1 assists per game. On the second team, Fairmont Senior's Andre Grant earns his place after a junior season with regular season averages of 10.3 points per game on 52.5% shooting from the field. ![]() Byrd's Brayden Thomason and Lewis County's Ben Putnam. With Dobbs, Goode, Parr, Crouso and Sickles taking up five spots, the rest of the first team is rounded out by Elkins' Cory Harper and Malachi Watson, Bridgeport's Anthony Spatafore, Grafton's J.T. The senior made first team all-conference for his efforts. North Marion's Harley Sickles helped the Huskies to a state tournament berth this season, averaging 17.1 points on 56.5% shooting with 10.1 rebounds and 2.3 assists per game. Junior Jackson Crouso averaged 13.3 points per game on 63% shooting, 7.7 rebounds, 2.1 assists, 1.3 steals and 1.2 blocks per game. Senior Evan Parr averaged 15.3 points per game on 50% shooting this season to lead the Bees, along with 5.2 rebounds, 4.5 assists and 2.2 steals per game. East Fairmont placed three players between the two all-conference teams.įairmont Senior's DeSean Goode earned a first team all-conference nod after a regular season where the senior averaged 18.4 points per game on 72% shooting and 39% shooting from 3 and averaged 9.4 rebounds per game, 1.9 assists per game and 1.5 steals per game rounding out the big man's stat line.Įast Fairmont has their own guard-post duo on the first team. The Bees recorded wins over teams like Scott, Elkins, Bridgeport and North Marion in the regular season. 24 against Grafton, and finishes his junior season already a two-time state champion.Įast Fairmont's Asterino receives the conference coach of the year award after his East Fairmont Bees finished the year 22-4, the highest win total in school history. Dobbs surpassed the 1,000 career point threshold on Feb. ![]()
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