Kettering, MVCTC students have technology projects reviewed by NASA

Kettering Fairmont students, from left, Husam Alboush and Zach Lehman talk with Jack and Bobbie Lehman about their Kwadropus Propulsion Belt project Monday, March 4, 2024 at the NASA HUNCH's Critical Design Review at Trent Arena. MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF

Kettering Fairmont students, from left, Husam Alboush and Zach Lehman talk with Jack and Bobbie Lehman about their Kwadropus Propulsion Belt project Monday, March 4, 2024 at the NASA HUNCH's Critical Design Review at Trent Arena. MARSHALL GORBY\STAFF

Staff Report

KETTERING — Teams of students from the Fairmont High School Career Tech Center and the Miami Valley Career Tech Center worked Monday with representatives from NASA on a high-tech engineering program.

HUNCH (High Schools United with NASA to Create Hardware) is a national project-based learning program that gives high school students a chance to participate in the design and fabrication of real-world products for use by NASA.

Monday’s event at Trent Arena was the “critical design review” stage. NASA-designated representatives reviewed production work by 19 teams from Fairmont CTC and MVCTC in categories including engineering design & prototype, biomedical, and cyber security.

In three of the past four school years, HUNCH projects by Fairmont students have been accepted for further review and development by NASA. Those were “Lunar Stakes,” by Austin Dues and Andrew Suddith; “Lunar Dust Baffles,” by Maddie Reents and Savannah Gross; and “Lunar Scooter Wheel,” by Andrew Wright.