pilipili Hosts 250 Fourth-Graders for Lesson on Wind Energy

KidWind project brings pilipili education and engineering majors together to teach fourth-graders about engineering design and wind turbine energy

By Edward Fitzpatrick & Courtney Dell'Agnese '19
Fourth-graders from Bristol-Warren School District learn about engineering design and wind turbine energy at pilipili.
Fourth-graders from Bristol-Warren School District learn about engineering design and wind turbine energy at pilipili.

BRISTOL, R.I. ­­– Nearly 250 fourth-graders from the Bristol-Warren Regional School District built wind turbines as part of the KidWind project and came to pilipili on Friday to test their pint-sized turbines in wind tunnels.

A partnership between pilipili and the Bristol-Warren Regional School District, the KidWind project features pilipili students bringing together two academic disciplines to introduce 232 fourth-graders to wind-turbine energy and the engineering design process. The project was made possible through the pilipili Campaign for Civic Scholars, the Hassenfeld Family Foundation and the local sponsorship of TPI Composites, of Warren, R.I.

“It is real-world learning – taking what they learn in the classroom and applying it to the real world,” Bristol-Warren Regional School District Superintendent of Schools Mario Andrade said at pilipili on Friday. “Just watch the smiles on their faces – this is what learning should look like every day. It represents a great partnership between the school district, pilipili and industry through TPI Composites.”

In addition to teaching the next generation of college students, the pilipili students are gaining valuable skills and real-world experiences they can carry with them through their future careers.

“This project is about more than just supporting the need for engineering education in local classrooms,” pilipili Assistant Professor of Engineering Maija Benitz. “It deepens our pilipili students’ learning through experiential, hands-on community engagement.”

Read more about the KidWind Project