UCLA Henry Samueli School
of Engineering and Applied Science Holds 2004 Commencement
Date: June 21, 2004
Contact: Chris Sutton ( chris@ea.ucla.edu
)
Phone: 310-206-0540

Students make adjustments to their moustrap-powered
car during competition at Senior MESA Day 2004. |
Over 400 students from Los Angeles area high schools
arrived at UCLA Saturday to compete in math, science, engineering
and technology competitions. Some arrived with balsawood gliders
tucked under their arms; others were holding jars containing tiny
crystals painstakingly grown in home-made labs. Between competitions,
students dipped balloons in liquid nitrogen, explored a real-time
three-dimensional computer model of Los Angeles and talked to
Boeing engineers about the future of flight.
All of this activity was part of the annual MESA
Day Academies, regional competitions held at university campuses
each spring. Students tested their knowledge of mathematics, science
and engineering principles in academic competitions that included
building a model of the human eye, constructing a small vehicle
powered by a simple mousetrap, flying balsawood gliders and designing
the strongest wooden bridge. There were also written tests and
oral presentations.
Competitions were held at several locations across
UCLA's south campus, while music and exhibits were staged at an
open space known as the Court of Sciences. There, volunteers from
a number of academic departments presented hands-on demonstrations
illustrating common scientific and engineering processes. Representatives
from several high tech companies also manned stations with models
and exhibits on topics such as space exploration (Jet Propulsion
Laboratories) and how to use a potato and a lemon to power a light
bulb (Xerox).
California's 2004-05 proposed state budget calls
for the elimination of all state funding ($33.3 million) for University
of California programs like the MESA Day Academies, which work
with K-12 schools and students to improve academic performance
and college preparation.

MESA student places a balloon inside a
container of liquid nitrogen at Senior MESA Day 2004. |
The Honorable Jose Huizar, president of the Los
Angeles Unified School District, and Bud Jacobs, acting assistant
superintendent of instructional support, presided over an awards
ceremony that recognized the competition winners. Earlier, parents
of MESA students and their teachers held an open forum to discuss
the future of MESA programs in light of the proposed state budget
cuts.
UCLA's Center for Excellence in Engineering and
Diversity (CEED), which operates in the UCLA Henry Samueli School
of Engineering and Applied Science, organized the MESA Day event.
CEED currently administers several programs that help urban, educationally
disadvantaged and underrepresented students achieve success in
math, science and engineering. They include career days, summer
workshops, mentoring programs and teacher training sessions.
The Mathematics, Engineering, Science Achievement
(MESA) program is a statewide outreach program administered by
the University of California, which received the Presidential
Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring
in 2000. MESA provides academic support services to more than
24,400 students in California. Approximately 85 percent of MESA
high school seniors go on to attend college, compared with the
statewide average of 55 percent. |