蜜桃传媒

Graphic featuring three photos of students at the Technology Student Association conference with text that says, "TSA Conference, Transforming Passion into Professions"

Hunter Meredith watched on as a dozen of his peers gathered around a bank of computers. The Smoky Hill High School freshman was hoping to qualify for his first ever drone flying race.

Hunter Meredith, Smoky Hill High School student at the Technology Student Association conference.

Hunter Meredith, Smoky Hill High School student at the Technology Student Association conference.

鈥淚t took me about two weeks to get a hang of it. To get good at it, it took me two to three months,鈥 he explained. 鈥淥n this course that they’re doing my time is currently 38 seconds.鈥澨

Meredith is one of the thousands of students who put their skills to the test at the (TSA) conference last month. About 1,600 middle and high schoolers participated in 98 separate events, ranging from engineering and costume design competitions to video production and quiz bowl contests.

Just months into his TSA experience, Meredith said drone flight has already become 鈥渙ne of his favorite hobbies.鈥

鈥淭his has really made me want to input technology into my job,鈥 he said. 鈥淭SA inspired me to be more creative and think about my future.鈥澨

鈥楳ake it Fun鈥

That kind of career exploration is what TSA is all about, said Dan Cornell, a design teacher at Smoky Hill and the school鈥檚 TSA advisor. He hoped his drone flight exhibit, which resembled a fancy video game, to attract students to a practical鈥攁nd profitable鈥攕kill.听

鈥淥ne of my top students is actually being paid $100 an hour to record high school football games so that the coach could watch the plays live,鈥 he said. 鈥淚’m looking at it like, 鈥楳ake it fun, get them excited!鈥欌澨

Including TSA, the 蜜桃传媒 (蜜桃传媒) coordinates eight (CTSOs) that provide professional development opportunities for learners in career and technical education (CTE) fields. About 155,000 high schoolers take at least one CTE course, representing 40% of all Colorado students.听

CTE specializes in teaching hands-on skills. In Justin Kast鈥檚 engineering classroom, first-year students build cars powered by carbon dioxide and move on to advanced designs in aerospace or civil engineering as they progress through the curriculum. During their senior year, they tackle an innovation of their choice.

TSA is a good indication of career preparation and workforce readiness.
Justin Kast, Engineering Instructor at Highlands Ranch High School

鈥淭he capstone can be a culminating semester project where students solve a problem that doesn’t have an existing solution,鈥 the Highlands Ranch High School teacher said. 鈥淒epending on what their skillsets are, it could be programming, could be robotics.鈥

Kast strongly encourages his students to join TSA to get extra practice and experience. He predicts that up to 80% of his CTE students go on to major in engineering at a college or university.听

鈥淭SA is a good indication of career preparation and workforce readiness,鈥 he said.

Photo of Rock Canyon High School students Jonathan Duong, Tanish Lodha, and Shiven Patel.

Rock Canyon High School students Jonathan Duong, Tanish Lodha, and Shiven Patel pose with their model home for the Architectural Design event.

Exploring Opportunities

Competitions also drill 鈥渟oft skills鈥 as much as technical ones. Rock Canyon High School students Jonathan Duong, Tanish Lodha, and Shiven Patel worked together to draft and build a model home and write a detailed report on their process.

鈥淭his is actually the fourth iteration of our design,鈥 explained Jonathan Duong. 鈥淲e wanted to build something that represented a pagoda. You have many different levels of geometric terraces.鈥

With such a complex project, the group focused on clear communication and quick problem-solving. They also relied on research and analysis to make sure their design was feasible.

Photo of the model home Rock Canyon High School students Jonathan Duong, Tanish Lodha, and Shiven Patel created for the conference.

Model home Rock Canyon High School students Jonathan Duong, Tanish Lodha, and Shiven Patel created for the conference.

鈥淚t鈥檚 always fun to explore your opportunities,鈥 Lodha said. 鈥淲e learned so much about like interior stuff like HVAC, electrical wiring, and how you build a house that can also be ADA compliant. There鈥檚 a lot that goes into that.鈥

The experience has helped the trio narrow their career interests.听

鈥淚 always took an interest to architecture, because you’re taking art and bringing it into life,鈥 Duong said. 鈥淣ot only being able to design a place where people can live, people can work, but then also to do that in the real world is something that really enticed me.鈥

While Patel is more drawn to mechanical engineering, he said he鈥檚 learned a lot through the competition.

鈥淭here are many different skills that we can take out of this. Learning how to design something like this to make it function in real life was really useful.鈥澨