Lanier Middle Teams Earn Two First Place Awards at Environmental Action Showcase
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Lanier Middle Teams Earn Two First Place Awards at Environmental Action Showcase

Lanier Middle School students earn top places at environmental showcase.

Lanier Middle School students earn top places at environmental showcase. Photo contributed

Students from Lanier Middle School won two first place awards at the fifth annual School Environmental Action Showcase (SEAS) held at George Mason University. Lanier teams took first place in the Caring for Our Watersheds competition with a plan to plant native grasses, and first place in their division of the KidWind Challenge for the most efficient wind turbine design.

The Lanier team plans to grow submerged aquatic vegetation in their science lab throughout the winter, then take a field trip to the Chesapeake Bay to plant the grasses in the spring. Lanier teams won five of the ten awards in the Caring for Our Watersheds event, placing third, sixth, seventh, and eighth in a field of 10.

Students from Dogwood Elementary took second place in the Caring for Our Watersheds competition with a look at how nutrient pollution and algal blooms affect the health of the local watershed.

A Crossfield Elementary team earned third place in the KidWind Challenge for wind turbine design and, along with the winning team from Lanier, were invited to compete in the 2016 National KidWind Challenge in New Orleans in May.

Students from Daniels Run Elementary, Dogwood Elementary, Flint Hill Elementary, Navy Elementary, and Carson Middle also took part in that competition. Special judges’ awards were awarded to Lanier Middle, Crossfield Elementary, and Navy Elementary.

Students from six FCPS schools entered videos into SEAS Video Visions, a short film festival celebrating students’ visions of a greener future. Video Visions participants included students from Belvedere Elementary, Crossfield Elementary, Dranesville Elementary, Lanier Middle, Providence Elementary, and Carson Middle.

SEAS is hosted by NoVA Outside in partnership with George Mason University’s Potomac Environmental Research and Education Center. Student teams displayed the environmental stewardship projects underway at their schools, created videos about their visions of a greener future, competed for funding to further develop and implement wind energy and watershed protection projects, and participated in hands-on STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) activities hosted by partner government agencies, nonprofit organizations and businesses.