High school students attend business entrepreneurship competition

Dayton Stem School students from left, Noah Negassi, Jayden Clark and Liam Urbaniak play a game before the regional Flexfactor competition held at Sinclair College Friday April 19, 2024. The FlexFactor program is a collaborative technology and entrepreneurship program funded by the department of defense, that allows youth to discover the value of a career in advanced manufacturing. JIM NOELKER/STAFF

Credit: JIM NOELKER

Credit: JIM NOELKER

Dayton Stem School students from left, Noah Negassi, Jayden Clark and Liam Urbaniak play a game before the regional Flexfactor competition held at Sinclair College Friday April 19, 2024. The FlexFactor program is a collaborative technology and entrepreneurship program funded by the department of defense, that allows youth to discover the value of a career in advanced manufacturing. JIM NOELKER/STAFF

High school students from around the region attended the 2024 Regional FlexFactor competition Friday on Sinclair Community College’s campus.

A total of 45 students from a dozen different schools presented concepts and business plans to a panel of business, education and community professionals.

The students are from Dayton Regional STEM School, Greene County Career Center, Miamisburg High School, Stebbins High School, Thurgood Marshall High School, Waynesville High School, Xenia High School, Goshen High School, Northwestern Junior High School, Piqua High School and Shawnee High School, plus the Wright Brothers Summer of Innovation team.

The FlexFactor program is funded by the Department of Defense and aims to improve critical thinking, creativity, and collaborative skills, while informing students about career pathways in STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) as well as advanced manufacturing.

Shawnee High School student Kyle Dingman makes his pitch to the judges at the Regional FlexFactor Competition held at Sinclair College Friday April 19, 2024. The FlexFactor program is a collaborative technology and entrepreneurship program funded by the department of defense, that allows youth to discover the value of a career in advanced manufacturing. JIM NOELKER/STAFF

Credit: JIM NOELKER

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Credit: JIM NOELKER

FlexFactor is from a California company called NextFlex that manufactures electronic parts.

Sinclair began using the FlexFactor program in 2021 to address the need for a more highly skilled workforce that is adaptive, technical and has automation-era skillsets.

Sinclair says since launching the program, nearly 1,500 students from 17 high schools and education organizations from six counties have participated. In the program, students identify a world problem, conceptualize a product to address the problem, build a business model, then pitch their product ideas to a panel of academic and industry professionals.

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