VOA 學(xué)英語,練聽力,上聽力課堂! 注冊 登錄
> VOA > VOA常速英語-VOA Standard English > 2016年05月VOA常速英語 >  內(nèi)容

VOA常速英語:年輕人解決城市養(yǎng)老問題

所屬教程:2016年05月VOA常速英語

瀏覽:

2016年05月20日

手機(jī)版
掃描二維碼方便學(xué)習(xí)和分享
https://online2.tingclass.net/lesson/shi0529/0009/9735/20160520.mp3
https://image.tingclass.net/statics/js/2012
Every city has its problems, and hopefully is always looking for unique ways to solve them. One eastern U.S. city is hoping the creativity and outside the box thinking of young people can come to the rescue.

An oyster habitat, abandoned houses converted to gardens, a cart that turns into a homeless shelter, a multi-layered rainwater filtering system — these are some of the products they came up with.

The inventors are students, from 10 to 17 years old.

Big problems, simple answers

Sixth grader Sydney Lane-Ryer and her team focused on the decreasing oyster population in the nearby Chesapeake Bay.

"Our solution," she explained, "was to create an oyster habitat that will sit on the bottom of the ocean, or I guess the harbor in our case, that will be connected to a floating wetland that has a bunch of different plants that will also give nutrients with their roots to the oysters to help them thrive, and it will also help filter out toxins and dirt and other things in the water."

A high school team decided to tackle a different problem in Baltimore: more than 16,000 abandoned homes.

"We wanted to convert abandoned row houses into greenhouses," said Natasha Dada, "that would serve as community gardens and also would produce food for homeless shelters and soup kitchens in the area."

Thinking outside the box

The Digital Harbor Foundation, which sponsors youth technology programs, hosts FabSlam.

"The purpose of FabSlam is to give kids a chance to experiment with creative problem-solving," said Shawn Grimes, the Foundation's Technology Director. "So we present a challenge to them that's very open, very vague, and we give them an opportunity to come up with their own solution to their own problem that they identify within that sort of constraint."

The teams had six weeks to get everything done — from identifying a problem and doing research, and designing and developing a prototype or a product using a 3-D printer and other digital manufacturing techniques.

"A lot of these houses... don't have gas or water or electricity," Natasha told VOA, "so we wanted to make the house self-sustaining. We have solar panels on the roof. ... We also have an irrigation system with rain collection and filtration that automatically waters the plants."

The teams pitched their project to the judges and presented them to the audience.

And then the announcement of the winner.

Judge Marty McGuire said his favorite part of the project "is that they essentially showed us something that they could put in the water right now and we can see how well it works."

For sixth grader Sydney Lane-Ryer, the competition was eye-opening. "I really learned a good life lesson here," she said. "I learned that with the right technology and even with your own hands and your mind and creativity, you really could make something that could change the world."

用戶搜索

瘋狂英語 英語語法 新概念英語 走遍美國 四級聽力 英語音標(biāo) 英語入門 發(fā)音 美語 四級 新東方 七年級 賴世雄 zero是什么意思哈爾濱市財(cái)苑新居英語學(xué)習(xí)交流群

  • 頻道推薦
  • |
  • 全站推薦
  • 推薦下載
  • 網(wǎng)站推薦