Biomedical students in Jamie Jobe and Megan Kemper’s science classes learned from 13 graduate students from Washington University in St. Louis during a research showcase in the Pattonville High School library.
“I have partnered with Dr. Spencer Lake's musculoskeletal research lab in the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis for the past two school years,” Jobe said. “He received a grant from the National Science Foundation and part of that is to partner with high school students and expose them to biomedical research, and because of that, I have been able to take my seniors to Washington University to see research in action.”
The traditional National Signing Day took center stage on Wednesday as student-athletes from Pattonville High School were able to lock up scholarships and sign National Letters of Intent to continue their academic and athletic careers.
Joined by their coaches, family and friends, 17 Pattonville High School student-athletes made a commitment to play a sport at the next level during an event hosted in the main gym on Feb. 1.
In-person classes and after-school activities are canceled today, Monday, Jan. 30, in the Pattonville School District due to unsafe road conditions. All district and school offices will be closed.
Today will be a virtual learning day for students. Students will take part in independent learning activities at home with online teacher support. Teachers’ hours of availability to support student learning will be shared on their student learning platform or via email.
Other school and district staff will work from home unless other arrangements are made with their supervisor. All custodians should report to work at 9 a.m. regardless of shift. Maintenance staff should report to work at their regular time or as instructed by their supervisor. Please work with your supervisor regarding adjustments to your regularly scheduled hours.
As an awareness for family schedules, today’s virtual learning day will not need to be made up in the future.
Retired astronaut Robert (Bob) Behnken, Class of 1988, received the Congressional Space Medal of Honor from vice president Kamala Harris on Jan. 31. Behnken received the award for bravery in NASA’s SpaceX Demonstration Mission-2 (Demo-2) to the International Space Station in 2020. On May 30, 2020, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the company’s Crew Dragon spacecraft launched to the space station, marking the first mission to launch with astronauts as part of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program. As a space station crew member for 62 days, Behnken performed four spacewalks with former NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy and contributed more than 100 hours to the orbiting laboratory’s scientific investigations. Behnken received the honor along with former astronaut Douglas Hurley. They are the first honorees since 2006 to receive this honor.
Pattonville High School freshman Sophia Luraschi was selected to represent the I-270 Project Pave program at Gov. Mike Parson’s State of the State address to the Missouri General Assembly in Jefferson City on Jan. 18.
Luraschi was able to meet Gov. Parson and first lady Teresa Parson in the governor's office and then listened to the governor's address from the House Gallery and wasrecognized during his speech. After the address, Luraschi returned to the governor's office to meet Lt. Gov. Mike Kehoe and several directors from the Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT).
MoDOT’s $278 million I-270 North Project is an investment in the infrastructure and transportation network of St. Louis. MoDOT and its contracting team leads, Millstone Weber and Parson’s Transportation Group, are also investing in the futures of area high school students near the project boundaries.
Project Pave, a Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) Program, will mentor, teach and support students attending targeted St. Louis North County high schools. The goal is to stimulate an interest in and pursuit of heavy highway design, engineering and construction careers.