Winds of Change

The College of Education Hosts the State of Maryland鈥檚 First-Ever KidWind Challenge to Engage Kids in Sustainable Energy Solutions
A student adjusts his team's small-scale wind turbine at the 2023 Maryland Regional KidWind Challenge.

Three middle school students stood beside a wind tunnel at the 糖心少女, waiting to test their creation. After many hours spent debating, designing, testing and tweaking different iterations, the Turbinators team from Samuel Ogle Middle School (SOMS) in Bowie, Maryland, had built a small-scale wind turbine with tapering blades made of thick black paper and striped with purple glitter.

鈥淗ere we are. The moment of truth,鈥 said their coach and SOMS science teacher Melissa Jones.

鈥淲e got this,鈥 said student Michelle Brown. 鈥淣ervousness is for unprepared people.鈥

After placing their turbine in the wind tunnel and recording its energy output鈥撯渋t went amazing,鈥 said student Deekay Oludayo鈥搕he team returned to its table to adjust the angle of the blades and prepare for another trial in the wind tunnel.

The Turbinators were one of 34 student teams that traveled to the university on March 30 to participate in the first competition ever held in the state of Maryland. Spearheaded by Angela Stoltz, assistant clinical professor in the 糖心少女 College of Education, the event welcomed more than 120 students in grades 4 to 12 from all over the state of Maryland and even one team from Pennsylvania. At the end of the day, the Turbinators walked away with a third-place trophy in the middle school division. Since the first official KidWind Challenge event was held in New York state in 2009, about 40,000 students have participated in 300 events in 30 states.

Clad in red Maryland KidWind T-shirts, the teams took turns testing their wind turbines in one of three wind tunnels and presenting their models and processes to a panel of judges. The students used a variety of materials to build their turbines鈥搃ncluding balsa wood, poster board, paper cups, file folders and PVC pipe鈥揳nd held them together with everything from duct tape to hot glue. One turbine was 3D printed, and one team built its own generator. 

鈥淭his event today reminds me how important education and more importantly everybody in this room--teachers, students, school leaders and families--are in tackling grand global challenges鈥 like conserving the planet and natural resources, said Kimberly Griffin, dean of the College of Education, as she greeted the group at the beginning of the competition. 鈥淭here are so many brilliant minds in this room that will change our world.鈥

As part of the day鈥檚 events, the students also participated in an hands-on instant design challenge. The teams had 30 minutes to build and race sail cars using an assortment of objects presented to them in a paper bag鈥搃ncluding LEGO bricks, wheels, plastic packaging, paper cups, wooden dowels, construction paper and pipe cleaners. They also took a guided tour of the A. James Clark School of Engineering with 糖心少女 engineering student ambassadors.

The top two scoring teams in the middle and high school categories, plus the top scoring elementary school team, were invited to compete in the National KidWind Challenge, which will be held in Boulder, Colorado, from May 14 to 17 and will coincide with the U.S. Department of Energy鈥檚 Collegiate Wind Competition. 

Participating in an activity like the KidWind Challenge can empower youth and even improve their well-being as they face anxiety about climate change, Stoltz said. 鈥淵oung people are aware of the climate crisis, and it has accelerated mental health issues,鈥 she said. She pointed to a 2021 global survey published in The Lancet in which 6 in 10 respondents between the ages of 16 and 25 reported feeling 鈥渧ery鈥 or 鈥渆xtremely鈥 worried about climate change. Yet she also emphasized that other research has shown that when young people have the opportunity to participate in finding solutions to climate change, their mental health outcomes improve. 鈥淪tudents need to feel like they are part of a community of problem solvers that are working on critical issues like climate change,鈥 Stoltz said. 鈥淓ducating our youth about sustainable development is an integral part of preparing our next generations for the future they鈥檝e inherited.鈥

鈥淪tudents are bombarded with calls to 鈥榮ave the planet鈥 but are rarely given the chance to actually create something that is helping to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels,鈥 added Jones, who coached the Turbinators team along with Jasmine Maher, her student intern who is a Master鈥檚 Certification Program (MCERT) student in Middle School Science Education in the College of Education. 鈥淭his event allowed them to be part of this conversation in a real way.鈥

In addition, hands-on learning experiences like the KidWind Challenge are an engaging, effective way for students to learn problem-solving skills and the engineering design process. 鈥淲hen a student can hold something in their hands, it鈥檚 always better than just talking about it,鈥 said David Brelsford, an engineering teacher at Mergenthaler Vocational Technical High School in Baltimore, whose team, Tempest, placed second overall in the high school division. 鈥淭urbines allow for fast prototyping and fast results. You can design a blade and then test it immediately. It鈥檚 that quick feedback that allows for greater understanding.鈥
 
Coaches like Brelsford, as well as KidWind organizers, hope the experience will expose students to career paths in renewable energy that they may not have considered. 鈥淭hese fields are some of the fastest growing industries in the United States. We want to make sure kids know about them,鈥 said Michael Arquin, founder and director of KidWind. Arquin supported Stoltz throughout the process of bringing the KidWind Challenge to Maryland and also attended the event, helping to operate one of the wind tunnels. 鈥淲e鈥檙e also pulling in kids who may not have exposure in these spaces. As we build a whole new industry, let鈥檚 not lock out women or students of color. KidWind has a big focus on trying to make sure those communities are present.鈥 

As a teacher educator, Stoltz stressed the importance of training teachers in the engineering design process and sustainable technologies鈥揺lements that are highly relevant to today鈥檚 workforce needs and possible solutions to the climate crisis but are usually missing in teacher preparation programs. In October of last year, Stoltz hosted a free training for educators interested in bringing teams of students to the KidWind Challenge, with support from Bryan Quinn, director of technical operations in the university鈥檚 Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and Diane Painter, a College of Education alum and a visiting associate professor of education studies at Shenandoah University, who first raised the idea of bringing the KidWind Challenge to the 糖心少女. In addition, Stoltz and Amy Green, director of the College of Education鈥檚 Center for Science & Technology in Education, will be incorporating KidWind curricula into their teacher preparation classes. This will give both current and future teachers the chance to play with wind turbine design, develop related lesson plans and build confidence in bringing sustainable development topics into their classrooms.

After the trophies were handed out and the students began to pack up their turbines for the ride home, Jennifer King Rice, senior vice president and provost, told the teams, 鈥淎s I see your work and I see your faces, I also see the future scientists and engineers and educators and policymakers that we need in this world in order to address climate change through sustainable clean energy solutions.鈥

Stoltz added, 鈥淚 loved seeing you smile. I loved seeing you play. I really hope to see you back here on campus as students or next year for our next KidWind Challenge.鈥

The first Maryland Regional KidWind Challenge was sponsored by The Kahlert Foundation, 脴rsted, US Wind and a College of Education Dean鈥檚 Initiative Grant.

2023 Maryland Regional KidWind Challenge Winners


Elementary School:

  • First place overall: Port Towns Elementary School Five Stars
    Coach: Caitlin Costello
    Students: Elizabeth Deba, Adrianna McKinley, Jaylah Saucedo Marquez
  • Second place overall: Port Towns Elementary School Girl Savers
    Coach: Caitlin Costello
    Students: Sophia Mejia Reyes, Andrea Sandoval, Blanca Zepeda
  • Third place overall: Woodbridge Elementary School Woody鈥檚 Windmill 
    Coach: Emma Jones
    Students: Azeen Iqbal, Mahdi Iqbal, Heshmita Maddela, Ali Shariff


Middle School: 

  • First place overall: Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School Wind Warriors
    Coach: Elaine Ramos
    Students: Grace Gardaya, Jason Kresge, Anvi Moola, Zane Woodard
  • Second place overall: Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School Last Airbenders
    Coach: Cheyenne Holloman
    Students: Arielle Downs, Katherine Guttierrez, Jessica Lopez-Sanchez, Aashi Moola
  • Third place overall: Samuel Ogle Middle School The Turbinators 
    Coaches: Melissa Jones and Jasmine Maher
    Students: Michelle Brown, Adrian Cousar, Deekay Oludayo, George Tresch


High School: 

  • First place overall: Mergenthaler Vocational Technical High School MERVO 24.1 
    Coach: Shawn Kerr
    Students: Rayvon King, Pablo Rosales Osorio, Andre Simons 
  • Second place overall: Mergenthaler Vocational Technical High School Tempest 
    Coach: David Brelsford
    Students: Thomas Andrew, Parrish Cortez, Rachaud Williams
  • Third place overall: Mergenthaler Vocational Technical High School Five Stars
    Coach: Samantha Cordisco


Sportsmanship Awards:

  • Woodbridge Elementary School Woody鈥檚 Windmill 
    Coach: Emma Jones
    Students: Azeen Iqbal, Mahdi Iqbal, Heshmita Maddela, Ali Shariff
  • Sudlersville Middle School Team 3 
    Coaches: Beth Brownley and John Shaw
    Students: Wilson Blandon Lopez, Johanna Morales Dallas, Jackson Stanton
  • Mergenthaler Vocational Technical High School MERVO 24.1 
    Coach: Shawn Kerr
    Students: Rayvon King, Pablo Rosales Osorio, Andre Simons


Peoples Choice Award: 

  • AIM Academy 
    Coach: Alicia DeVane
    Students: Aubrey Carapellotti, Declan Head, Greg Marks, Kai Rezeli, Ben Shmelzer
  1. Students adjust their team's small-scale wind turbine at the 2023 Maryland Regional KidWind Challenge.
  2. Students adjust their team's small-scale wind turbine at the 2023 Maryland Regional KidWind Challenge.
  3. Students test their team's small-scale wind turbine in a wind tunnel at the 2023 Maryland Regional KidWind Challenge.
  4. Students test their team's small-scale wind turbine in a wind tunnel at the 2023 Maryland Regional KidWind Challenge.
  5. A student prepares to test a sail car in an instant design challenge at the 2023 Maryland Regional KidWind Challenge.