Anonymous donation sends Utah junior high robotics team to world championship


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CLEARFIELD — A robotics team at North Davis Junior High is headed to the world championship.

The team qualified by taking the state title but faced a big challenge in raising the thousands of dollars to go there. An anonymous donor changed all that.

The fundraising now is just icing on the cake.

North Davis is a Title 1 school, meaning it's in a lower-income area, so this is a really big gift for them.

It may look like all Legos and rubber bands, but their robot represents hundreds of hours after school.

Team member Heber Reed said, "And we'd take it home and work on it there."

"So many times," said another team member, Levi Christiansen.

Heber agreed with a laugh.

The four ninth graders are getting to know each other very well.

Robotics team member Ashlyn Peterson said, "It's a lot of fun to build and to code. And again, just to hang out with all of these nerds."

Also, getting to know Max, the block-collecting, color-sorting robot that's won them a lot of recognition.

"The Excellence Award is really your score against everyone else's score in total," Ashlyn said.

They picked up six of those awards, four first-place awards, along with the state title, and a design award.

More than enough to qualify them for the VEX Robotics World Championship in Dallas this May.

"I'm going to Worlds. It's a big opportunity for me and I'm really looking forward to it," Levi said.

Each of these kids is looking to pursue careers in science and tech.

Nathan Toomey said, "One thing I like with robotics is building things, and that goes well with engineering because you can build things to solve world problems."

Nathan Toomey and Heber Reed speak about the long hours they worked on Max after school.
Nathan Toomey and Heber Reed speak about the long hours they worked on Max after school. (Photo: Mike Anderson, KSL-TV)

And just days ago, they weren't sure if they'd even be able to go. With at least $2,000 per student for expenses, it was a big ask.

"Yeah, it's life-changing for them. It's an amazing opportunity," Christina Brimhall said. She is the robotics team coach. She said an anonymous donor stepped up, giving the team enough to reach their $10,000 goal for the trip.

"We were all in just utter shock. We got that donation," she said.

Now they'll get that chance to see how Max stacks up against teams from around the world, and also a chance for a few other firsts.

"You haven't been on a plane before?" Ashlyn asked Nathan.

He responded. "Nope."

"I haven't either," Levi said.

The robotics team hosted a yard sale in front of the school on Saturday. You can help the robotics team by clicking here.*

From here, they're just raising funds to have some tokens to share with kids from other schools and to support the program.

*KSL.com does not assure that the money deposited to the account will be applied for the benefit of the persons named as beneficiaries. If you are considering a deposit to the account, you should consult your own advisers and otherwise proceed at your own risk.

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Utah K-12 educationUtahDavis CountyEducation
Mike Anderson
Mike Anderson often doubles as his own photographer, shooting and editing most of his stories. He came to KSL in April 2011 after working for several years at various broadcast news outlets.

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