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Brittany Hunter and her daughter, Briella Speth, learn about plant sonification during STEAM Challenge Night at the Berkshire Innovation Center.
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BCC technical assistant Linda Merry has people hear the sounds from their pulse and from plants.
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Kids learned to program robots with Flying Cloud Institute.
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Killian Olsen checks to see if there are any germs left after he washed his hands.
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Kids build a Lego fidget spinner with Bottomless Bricks.
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Families learn how to fly drones with Mount Everett Robotics, the team from Mount Everett Regional School.
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Creating sculptures from precut pieces with Berkshire Art Center.
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Building circuit boards with Flying Cloud.
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Making paper with Crane Currency.
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Sharp Sterile shows how it provides sterile filled containers.
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BeatNest, a music school, demonstrates different sounds.
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Building wooden boats with Families built a boat with Berkshire Country Day School.
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Gel printmaking with Mass Audubon.

Flying Cloud STEAM Challenge Night Brings Science to Schoolchildren

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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Boyd BioMedical shows how different materials appear at 100x magnification.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Children and their families were able to learn from a range of science experiments last week night from Flying Clouds annual STEAM Challenge Night.

Flying Cloud, an organization that offers programs in the arts and science, technology, engineering, art, and math (STEAM) to schools and children in the area, brought together about 20 organizations at the Berkshire Innovation Center to demonstrate science-based projects.

"We believe in creative expression, as well as being an integral piece of learning science. And so we call it our STEAM Challenge. And then all the people that we get to work with all through the year, all of these different organizations and businesses, they come and offer a hands-on activity and, honestly, they just bring such creative and imaginative things," said Flying Cloud Executive Director Maria Rundle.

Organizations and businesses, including Bottomless Bricks, BeatNest, MassAudobon, Latinas413, Mount Everett Robotics, and more were interacting with students Thursday night.

Boyd BioMedical, a manufacturer in Lee, came to the challenge night for the first time and was demonstrating different materials and what they looked like at 100x magnification.

"It's just a way to stimulate the minds of the young kids and get them interested in science," said Director of Quality Dan DeFranco. "I have kids of my own. I love the fact that they like getting into the experiments and doing these fun things. So the more you can encourage it, the better off they are." 

Linda Merry, a life sciences technical assistant at Berkshire Community College, brought plants and galvanometers, electromechanical measuring instruments. She used the devices to play the sounds of evapotranspiration -- water evaporating from the soil and plants -- as well as the sounds from the body.

"I think it's important because we have a literal connection to plants that conventional science is only just starting to catch up on," she said.

Brittany Hunter and her family were at the event and learning about the sounds from the plants and said the event is great especially for her daughter.

"It's good interaction for them to just get used to, especially her as a female, knowing that she can do this type of science," Hunter said.

Hunter's daughter, Briella Speth, said she likes science and thinks she might do something with science when she grows up.

"It's more fun than being in school, because it's more hands on, and you get to be creative and see new things," Speth said.

Ann Billetz, a professor of biology at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, held a handwashing station in conjunction with the Berkshire STEM Network. Children put Glo Germ detection gel on their hands, washed them, and then used a blacklight to see if any Glo Germ was left.

"I think this is what makes kids excited about STEM and science, that these are the activities that get you excited, sitting in school learning about information is not the most exciting. Science is all about exploration and discovery," Billetz said. "So for this, where they get to do these kind of activities, are things they'll remember, and hopefully it makes them a little more excited about science."

Jonie Olsen, her husband and her son, Killian, tried the hand washing table. 

"A really exciting thing to see our greater community come together for children, that's what I'm happy about, and to expose them to all these different types of activities, some that are fun and silly, like this germ one and ones that they really have to think about, like creating a thing to go down the zip line," she said.

Olsen said Killian is homeschooled and this event is a great way to connect with his friends and is also way for him to get into the real world and get these experiences.

"Because in everyday life, they're not always getting these experiences, and this gets them off of their tablets and into the real world and really seeing different jobs that people have and just different things that they can do with their hands and with their brains," she said.

Rundle said she hopes the kids feel empowered and encouraged through science when they leave the event.

"I think they take away that they are little scientists and they are capable, and they can try something and it doesn't work, and they can try again, and they can see their own ideas co-created with the adults from, I mean, this is a very impressive lineup of people that have come out here tonight," she said.

"I'm so grateful to them, and the fact that these kids get to identify with them and feel that they're co-creating an experience together. I hope that they feel empowered, and I hope they see their own excellence through the eyes of the people that they get to work alongside tonight."


Tags: science fair,   STEAM,   

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NAMI Raises Sugar With 10th Annual Cupcake Wars

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. To contact the Crisis Text Line, text HELLO to 741741. More information on crisis hotlines in Massachusetts can be found here


Whitney's Farm baker Jenn Carchedi holds her awards for People's Choice and Best Tasting.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) of Berkshire County held its 10th annual cupcake wars fundraiser Thursday night at the Country Club of Pittsfield.

The event brought local bakeries and others together to raise money for the organization while enjoying a friendly competition of cupcake tasting.

Local bakeries Odd Bird Farm, Canyon Ranch, Whitney's Farm and Garden, and Monarch butterfly bakery each created a certain flavor of cupcake and presented their goods to the theme of "Backyard Barbecue." When Sweet Confections bakery had to drop out because to health reasons, NAMI introduced a mystery baker which turned out to be Big Y supermarket.

The funds raised Thursday night through auctions of donated items, the cupcakes, raffles, and more will go toward the youth mental health wellness fair, peer and family support groups, and more. 

During the event, the board members mentioned the many ways the funds have been used, stating that they were able to host their first wellness fair that brought in more than 250 people because of the funds raised from last year and plan to again this year on July 11. 

"We're really trying to gear towards the teen community, because there's such a stigma with mental illness, and they sometimes are hesitant to come forward and admit they have a problem, so they try to self medicate and then get themselves into a worse situation," said NAMI President Ruth Healy.

"We're really trying to focus on that group, and that's going to be the focus of our youth mental health wellness fair is more the teen community. So every penny that we raise helps us to do more programming, and the more we can do, the more people recognize that we're there to help and that there is hope."

They mentioned they are now able to host twice monthly peer and family support groups at no cost for individuals and families with local training facilitators. They also are now able to partner with Berkshire Medical Center to perform citizenship monitoring where they have volunteers go to different behavioral mental health units to listen to patients and staff to provide service suggestions to help make the unit more effective. Lastly, they also spoke of how they now have a physical office space, and that they were able to attend the Berkshire Coalition for Suicide Prevention as part of the panel discussion to help offer resources and have also been able to have gift bags for patients at BMC Jones 2 and 3.

Healy said they are also hoping to expand into the schools in the county and bring programming and resources to them.

She said the programs they raise money for are important in reaching someone with mental issues sooner.

"To share the importance of recognizing, maybe an emerging diagnosis of a mental health condition in their family member or themselves, that maybe they could get help before the situation becomes so dire that they're thinking about suicide as a solution, the sooner we can reach somebody, the better the outcome," she said.

The cupcakes were judged by Downtown Pittsfield Inc. Managing Director Rebecca Brien, Pittsfield High culinary teacher Todd Eddy, and Lindsay Cornwell, executive director Second Street Second Chances.

The 100 guests got miniature versions of the cupcakes to decide the Peoples' Choice award.

The winners were:

  • Best Tasting: Whitney's Farm (Honey buttermilk cornbread cupcakes)
  • Best Presentation: Odd Bird Farm Bakery (Blueberry lemon cupcakes)
  • Best Presentation of Theme: Canyon Ranch (Strawberry shortcake)
  • People's Choice: Whitney's Farm

Jenn Carchedi has been the baker at Whitney's for six years and this was her third time participating in an event she cares deeply about.

"It meant a lot. Because personally, for me, mental health awareness is really important. I feel like coming together as a community, and Whitney's Farm is more like a community kind of place," she said

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