Aviation students A’Janay Lurry, seated, Jonathan Turner, standing from left, Ivory Nola-Scott and Vincent Smith Jr. use a flight simulator to practice drone flying on Nov. 2 at Corliss Early College STEM High School.
Corliss, Air Force Academy High School and Dunbar Vocational Career Academy are the three buildings in CPS that host aviation programs. “Of course, I knew nothing about drones,” Hudson said. But the questions prompted her to look online for resources on drone education and to learn about the licensing process. At first, Hudson thought she could learn the material and teach it. She quickly realized it was beyond her scope, with a curriculum loaded with science, math and weather.
Turner, who hopes to study computer engineering in college, joined the summer program because he didn’t know much about drones. But he learned about the smart features and artificial intelligence technology continuing to develop with the machines. Hudson said that many opportunities available to youth on the North Side are outside the reach of students on the Far South Side. Now, after the success of the program, she hopes the school can become a hub for drone piloting and aviation.
“It’s more important to know where you can fly, how high you can fly, how fast you can fly, versus flying the airplane,” he said. “Flying the airplane is the simple skill.”While the exam doesn’t test their ability to fly the drones, the students did get to pilot them a few times. But when the teens weren’t flying the real thing, they had access in the Corliss classroom to two drone flight simulators that were built by teachers and students.
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