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4-H Headquarters

ÐÓ°ÉÊÓÆµ Extension 4-H Youth Development

Physical Address:
Advancement Annex
619 Nez Perce Drive

Mailing Address:
875 Perimeter Drive, MS 3015
Moscow, ID 83844-3015

Phone: 208-885-6321

Fax: 208-885-4637

Email: fourh@uidaho.edu

Web: 4-H

4-H Generates Excitement for Science

A record 3,700 Idaho youth participated in robotics programs coordinated and developed by UI Extension 4-H Youth Development in 2014. Idaho’s 4-H science programs finished the year riding a fine trajectory, thanks to dedicated volunteers, our first summer interns in STEM (science, technology, engineering, math) and our highest ever participation in October’s 4-H National Youth Science Day.

FIRST Robotics Competitions

From 26 counties, hundreds of Idaho youth made, programmed and maneuvered robots through complex challenges in team competitions. For ages 9 to 14, a record 1,100 boys and girls competed in Nature’s Fury FIRST® LEGO League Challenge. For ages 12 to 18, a record number of FIRST® Tech Challenge teams came to UI’s Moscow campus for February’s Idaho FTC® Block Party Championship.

WeDo Robotics for Ages 5 to 9

For even younger children — ages 5 to 9 — UI Extension Robotics, formerly Idaho ROKS, piloted the WeDo Robotics program for 100 students in Magic Valley’s Boys & Girls Club, UI Extension Idaho County and Moscow’s Montrose Academy. WeDo engages children’s creative thinking, teamwork and problem-solving skills as they make and program robots using simple drag-and-drop software. 4-H will expand WeDo in 2015.

Summer Intern Outreach

Also in 2014, four ÐÓ°ÉÊÓÆµ summer interns expanded delivery of STEM programs to youth in Adams, Bannock, Bingham, Bonneville, Twin Falls and Washington counties. Results:

  • Youth learned sheep husbandry using “sheep taters” (potatoes)
  • A science summer camp at the Central Idaho 4-H Camp near Ketchum was invigorated
  • Reading programs illustrating robotics’ simplicity are now in some rural Idaho libraries
  • Interest increased for 4-H science programs including rocketry, entomology and embryology.

Rockets to the Rescue

October 2014 saw amateur rocketeers across Idaho launch their homemade rockets to deliver a critical payload of raisins to an island needing supplies. Twelve Rockets to the Rescue events, featuring 357 “rocket scientists” and 48 volunteers, made this year’s 4-H National Youth Science Day a booming success.

For more information contact

4-H Generates Excitement for Science

4-H Headquarters

ÐÓ°ÉÊÓÆµ Extension 4-H Youth Development

Physical Address:
Advancement Annex
619 Nez Perce Drive

Mailing Address:
875 Perimeter Drive, MS 3015
Moscow, ID 83844-3015

Phone: 208-885-6321

Fax: 208-885-4637

Email: fourh@uidaho.edu

Web: 4-H