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Budding young inventors have been hard at work as part of the MNA Stem Challenge 2018.

Teams have been tasked with working together to design and manufacture a product to improve or enhance the quality of life for a group or person that they consider to be disadvantaged.

In total, about two dozen schools from Shropshire, Staffordshire and the Black Country are taking part in the challenge launched by the MNA, publishers of the Shropshire Star and Express & Star, to promote the importance of the key Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths subjects.

The teams of six pupils, who have been each given a business mentor, will need to demonstrate their product or prototype as a working model at a presentation event at Dudley College of Technology, the challenge’s main sponsor, on July 5.

As part of their research, pupils from Telford Park School and their mentor Joe Dawes from Veolia visited The Lyneal Trust,near Ellesmere, a charity offering canal boat holiday for people with disabilities and their family, friends and carers. They are building a steering tiller for the charity’s adapted canal boats which cater for disabled people.

Their visit involved finding out more about customers’ needs and a short ride on the canal boats to test some designs and theories. Engineer Mr Dawes said: “The children all had ago actually driving the boat to understand first hand how their product would benefit users.

“It was a fun day in the sun for all and the Lyneal Trust are excited to see if the pupils can come up with a final product they can use.”
Meanwhile students from Telford Langley School along with science teacher Staci Rutherford and mentor Lee Drummond, director of teaching and learning at Telford based Cadcoe, were given a tour of the manufacturing facilities at the University of Wolverhampton’s Telford Innovation Campus. Ms Rutherford said the project was going well and event had been useful for giving them ideas

The teams will be judged according to four criteria on July 5– Best Work Plan, sponsored by Entrust; Best Team Work, sponsored by Kuka; Best Operating Model, sponsored by Denso; and Best Presentation, sponsored by the University of Wolverhampton
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News
The Shropshire Star was the first to answer the rallying call to help the county’s hospitals celebrate the NHS’s 70th birthday.

The Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust (SaTH), which runs Telford’s Princess Royal Hospital and The Royal Shrewsbury Hospital, will celebrate the 70th year of the NHS with a charity fun day and fun run on July 7.

And the trust is asking local businesses to get involved by donating gifts to put into 500 goodie bags for those taking part in the fun run. Raffle and tombola prizes are also needed.

A first edition of the Shropshire Star plus a copy of the Shropshire Weekly magazine will be in each of the goodie bags.

Julia Clarke, director of corporate governance at The Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust, said: “We are incredibly grateful to The Shropshire Star for their support, and I would like to thank them for their very generous donation. The support of businesses like the Shropshire is so important for our hospitals, as it benefits our patients and our staff.”

The 5km fun run will start at the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital at 10.30am on July 7 – people can sign up by visiting sath.nhs.uk – and will be followed immediately afterwards by the charity fun day from 11am to 5pm.

The celebratory fun day will feature a Through the Decades theme, with each sectioned into activities.

The fun day will be officially opened at 1pm with the unveiling of a commemorative sculpture that is being produced for SaTH by The British Ironwork Centre using obsolete hospital equipment.
The “call to arms” was launched earlier this month by Julia Clarke, with the support of Peter Guy, president of the Shropshire Chamber of Commerce, and Clive Knowles, owner of the British Ironwork Centre near Oswestry which has sponsored the goodie bags.
If you are able to help, email communications@sath.nhs.uk
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