EV Announcement with City of Boston and Madison Park TVHS

EV Announcement with City of Boston and Madison Park TVHS

Royal Bolling, Kevin McCaskill, and I were proud to be part of the City of Boston’s Electric Vehicle Announcement at Madison Park Technical Vocational High School (MPTVHS). Mayor Wu was there to kick off an EV tech training program for city workers, Madison Park students, and college students from Ben Franklin Institute of Technology.

Over the past year we worked hard for this day. It represents a huge step in preparing Boston students for tomorrow’s jobs, as well as making the city a leader in addressing the climate change crisis. To get the details, you can view the full announcement event here on YouTube, or simply scan the summary on the following pages.

Jim Sproul
Founder, The Sproul Company
Co-Founder, Cardinal Works

Electric Vehicle Announcement-City of Boston & Madison Park Technical Vocational HS
City of Boston Central Fleet Maintenance (CFM) / Madison Park Collaboration
Training Techs for the Future
Wed, April 6, 2022
10:00 – 10:45 AM
Madison Park Automotive Garage
Background
Over the last six months a collaborative effort was put forth by those identified in this Electric Vehicle Announcement that was funded by a grant for City of Boston, Department Environment, Energy and Open Space. Below is a timeline of the invited speakers.
00:00 – 00:50: Welcome To Madison Park – Dr. Sydney Brown-Head of School
Dr. Brown announcing Mayor Wu and Electric Vehicle training at Madison Park.
0:50 – 06:45: Mayor Wu’s open remarks include comments on how important vehicle electrification is to the climate and jobs of the future. Transportation is the 2nd highest cause of pollution and the City will lead by example and begin electrifying their school vehicles and buses. To do that, the workforce will need to be trained to support this program and charging stations will need to be installed. To begin, 10 city mechanics will be trained in a Train the Trainer program and in partnership with Madison Park. Starting in the fall of 2022, electric vehicle service and maintenance will become part of the core curriculum at Madison Park and offered to Benjamin Franklin Technical Institute as well. Mayor Wu will launch a pilot program for school bus electrification. Complete electrification of 700 school buses will be complete by 2030.
6:45 – 09:18: Rev. Mariama White-Hammond, Chief of Environment, Energy and Open Space-As an EV owner, she has to take her vehicle for service outside the City and wants to have it serviced here at Madison Park. Green jobs create opportunities in the leading edge technology and will transform the economy. The Chief looks forward to seeing all City vehicles service by “our own”.
09:18 – 15:08: Jascha Franklin-Hodge, Chief of Streets: Climate change is real and calls for urgent action as the window is closing. The City transportation department will take this seriously and prepare the city workforce for this electrification. This is opportunity for economic growth for new jobs and critical infrastructure. The City has an EV ready program for charging stations, a pilot program for electric bikes and EV Car Share program to help spur demand.
15:08 – 17:00: Delavern Stanislaus, BPS Director of Transportation: Discussed her pilot school bus electrification program. Next year they will have an equitable green initiative. See Boston.com for related article, “Boston to replace school buses with electric by 2030”
17:00 – 19:27: Kevin McCaskill, Assistant Superintendent, Boston Public Schools (BPS): Kevin starts by thanking those who have helped get the program up and running (Bill Coughlin, Royal Bolling & Jim Sproul). Madison Park has the ability to take a educational leadership position in the country with this leading-edge program for students of color. Kevin stresses to provide BPS continued support for the program.
19:27 – 22:05: Bill Coughlin, Director of Central Fleet Maintenance, City of Boston-Thanks all those that made this program happen and spoke of his 9-year relationship with Madison Park. He is expecting that within 18 months, a senior class should have gone through the program, City employees will have been trained and Benjamin Franklin will have classes offered. Bill thanks all the electric vehicle partners at the announcement that provided vehicles and he highlights how technology is changing the workforce and educational needs to service the fleet.
22:05 – 23:46: Mayor Wu’s Closing Remarks- Thanks all the students and specifically a rising star, Briana Duran, Massachusetts Association of Vocational Administrators (MAVA) Student of the Year.
23:46 – 37:09: Mayor Wu Press Q&A Session

Additional Reference Links:
1. Mayor Wu Announces Progress Towards Electrifying City Vehicle Fleets, April 6, 2022
2. Mayor Wu announces new electric vehicle plan in effort to reduce vehicle emmissions, December 10, 2021 by Boston Globe

Timilty Middle School Adopts MIT-BWSI’s RACECAR for STEM

Timilty Middle School Adopts MIT-BWSI’s RACECAR for STEM

Tomorrow’s job landscape will not look like today’s. Students at the Timilty Middle School in Roxbury are preparing for that future in a hands-on STEM program using autonomous vehicles.
Called ‘Tiger Works’, this after-school program engages a dozen students in all the aspects of first building, then programming a fully autonomous small robotic car that can drive itself around a complex track. 

Hands-on STEM Education

“Tiger Works is an extremely effective way to introduce some important engineering concepts.” Said Marvin Gutierrez, Principal of Timilty Middle School. “Each student assembles a model car, including a small camera and a computer processor. Then they program that on-board computer in Python, so it uses data from the camera to make decisions and issue electronic commands controlling the car.”

MIT Courseware Which Evolved at Madison Park 

The students are following a proven curriculum called RACECAR that originated with the MIT – Beaver Works Summer Institute (MIT-BWSI) for high school students. RACECAR is a very popular course at MIT-BWSI and has been offered there every year since 2016.
In 2020, RACECAR was adapted to create the Cardinal Works courseware at Madison Park Technical Vocational High School (MPTVHS) in Boston. Cardinal Works started there as an after-school program but is now incorporated into the standard curriculum. In 2021 it was also offered as a special program at Cape Cod Regional Technical High School.

From Beaver Works to Cardinal Works to Tiger Works

“When we adapted RACECAR for Madison Park, we used the Cardinal mascot name to come up with Cardinal Works.” Observed Jim Sproul, one of the program’s drivers. “My colleague, Royal Bolling, and I decided to do the same thing for the Timilty School; their mascot is the Tiger.”
“At every school, we adapt and improve RACECAR.” Continued Sproul. “Our Tiger Works model cars use some newer tech pieces that are less expensive and actually a little better, thanks to some great work by Bob Cassel, a volunteer for the Cardinal Works program with MIT.”

Teachers Love the Flexibility 

A key feature of the RACECAR curriculum is its flexibility. “It is most definitely not ‘teaching to a test.’ ” said Sam Mencher, lead teacher in the Tiger Works robotics program. “I feel like I can be creative, using what I know about my students to adapt the material.”

Bring This Course to Your School

MIT-BWSI, the Madison Park faculty and the Timilty school all want to help bring the RACECAR Program to more students in Boston and beyond. The need for future-focused technology education is clear and RACECAR has proven itself as an outstanding way to meet that need. 

For more details, reach out to us. We’d enjoy discussing your specific needs and how RACECAR can help your students prepare for tomorrow. 

James Sproul
Co-Founder
jsproul@sproulco.com

Royal Bolling
Co-Founder
royalbolling@yahoo.com