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Pent-up excitement

Educators converge in Memphis for in-person symposium

Together in person for the first time since 2019, more than 400 educators and industry leaders converged on Memphis, Tennessee, to get fired up about aeronautics in the classroom at the eighth annual AOPA You Can Fly High School Aviation STEM Symposium.
Social media influencer Swayne Martin addresses the packed symposium audience. An attendee at the symposium. Attendees also visited the FedEx facility in Memphis. Teachers and educators participated in cirriculum basics such as flight simulation... ...virtual reality... ...and hands-on exercises that are at the heart of the You Can Fly practical courses.

The pent-up excitement was palpable at the historic Peabody in downtown Memphis—filling the hotel to capacity. Teachers and school administrators from around the United States found great value in being a part of the three-day immersion. Raymond D. “Dr. G” Gonzalez is the iSTEAM coordinator and a science teacher at Fordham Preparatory School in the Bronx, New York. He sees the event as a way to help his students get plugged into the future needs of the aviation and aerospace community.

“You really make the bridge between classroom instruction and future industry. This was a dream come true to come here,” said Gonzalez, who is a student pilot and AOPA high school teacher flight training scholarship recipient. Gonzalez is also an active flight simmer. One highlight of his trip to the symposium was touring the FedEx facility and getting to see the company’s large full flight simulators. “The opportunity to collaborate, to have different experiences, to see how if we implement this curriculum, it can positively impact not only our students’ futures, but the aviation industry in general,” he said.

The symposium also drew some famous faces. YouTuber and airline pilot Swayne Martin hosted the event. Travel media personality and pilot Kellee Edwards was the keynote speaker at Tuesday morning’s general session. Edwards told the story of discovering that general aviation existed while waiting on the ramp in an airliner at a California airport and seeing a pilot do pattern work in between airline operations. Her journey into aviation began shortly after with an introductory flight at Whiteman Airport in Los Angeles. In her uplifting, multimedia presentation she said that she lives by one rule: Nothing is impossible. “Impossible does not belong in my vocabulary, it does not belong in anyone around me’s vocabulary. They know if you hang out with me, we’re going to do all the things—whether we fail or not,” she told the crowd.

For AOPA leaders, the event created to provide a mix of professional development and inspiration has helped the high school program grow from 29 schools across 17 states in the 2017–2018 school year to more than 400 schools serving 15,000 students. The curriculum, supported by the AOPA Foundation, is offered at no cost to educators who complete an application process.

“The energy is so high. We’ve got people who are brand-new, and people who have been using the curriculum for years. They are all excited to be here and see resources,” said Elizabeth Tennyson, senior vice president of the AOPA Foundation.

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The You Can Fly program and the Air Safety Institute are funded by charitable donations to the AOPA Foundation, a 501(c)(3) organization. To be a part of the solution, visit aopafoundation.org/donate.


Sierra Harrop
Sierra Harrop
Producer/Videojournalist—AOPA Live®
Sierra Harrop has been an AOPA Live producer/videojournalist since 2012. She is a private pilot with a tailwheel endorsement who is currently working on her instrument rating and commercial pilot certificate.

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