Robotics team visits local Elementary school to show off their skills
PRINCETON, WV (WVNS) – Three teams from local schools in southern West Virginia visited the VEX Robotics World Championship to showcase their skills a few weeks ago.
Straley Elementary, Montcalm High School and Mercer County all returned from the Championship with new knowledge about what to expect next year! There were teams from around 55 countries at the World Championship in Dallas Texas. Some teams did not speak English well, so they used translator apps to communicate.
3 Mercer County Robotics teams headed to world championship in Dallas
'It is really hard to figure out like what to do if you have to, like, pre-planned with the team. But I personally, we went to go talk to the team and practiced with them, so we did it all. But like it's hard to do it when you have practiced with them for the entire year.'
The Mercer and Straley Teams visited Princeton Primary to show the younger students what they have to expect if they want to join next year.
Communication is key when joining either team. I asked what Team Electro Storm's favorite part about the competition was.
'Probably meeting different people and playing with them because I saw. We saw a lot of different bots.'
Next year, the teams say they are ready to bring home the Championship cup back to West Virginia.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Read to Succeed Buffalo branching to Niagara Falls schools
The Niagara Falls City School District is looking for senior citizens to help elementary students read. Read to Succeed Buffalo, an AARP Foundation Experience Corps program operating in Buffalo since 2016, will be expanding to Bloneva Bond Primary School on Niagara Street starting next school year. SCHEER: Want to help a Falls school student? Volunteer to read Dr. G. Lawrence McNally didn't want to stop providing medical advice to children and their parents. The program wants to bring 10 to 20 people ages 50 and older to help improve the reading skills of kindergarteners, first-, and second-graders. 'The promise is, from the district, you will be welcomed,' said Supervisor Mark Laurrie, encouraging people to become volunteers during the program announcement on Friday. 'You'll be accepted. You'll be supported, and you'll work with great kids from Read to Succeed.' After the volunteers complete a two-day training session in September, they will start working with students in October. A literacy coach supporting the tutors curates a library of read-along books they and the students read. The helpers meet the students individually twice a week for 30-minute sessions for every week of the school year. Read to Succeed is eying between 30 and 36 students to participate, who are arranged to be taken out of English or language classes for their sessions. Anne Ryan, the executive director of Read to Succeed Buffalo, said that by the end of the third grade, 78% of Niagara Falls students are not reading at that grade level, with two-thirds of fourth-graders across the state not reading at that level. Studies were done to show that tutoring like this has provided gains in student learning, with all the participating students in Buffalo schools last year improving their reading ability, reading fluency, and social and emotional learning. 'Even if they (the outcomes) weren't great, they appreciate the one-on-one mentoring that these adults provide,' Ryan said. Read to Succeed is looking to have 10 volunteers each at Bloneva Bond and Henry J. Kalfas Elementary on Beech Avenue, remaining only at Bloneva Bond if they get less than 10 to 12. It is looking to expand to the district's other elementary schools in the future. G. Lawrence McNally, a retired pediatrician, has been volunteering at Buffalo schools since 2023 after hearing from one of his wife's friends who also volunteers. He has found the experience very rewarding, with students he works with calling him Dr. Lars. 'It was really rewarding to see all my first graders be below the benchmark, and by Christmas. ... they were all doing more at a first-grade level,' McNally said. The school district is using some of its Title I funds to bring this program here. Those interested can look further at
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The best reactions to PSG's Champions League triumph 📲
The best reactions to PSG's Champions League triumph 📲 When we talk about a historic victory, we inevitably talk about historic tweets. It can be said that fans from all over the world have been particularly creative in celebrating this Parisian title. Here is a selection of the best tweets after the final whistle. Also read: - Former PSG players pay tribute to the club 🥹 Advertisement - The jab from the Mayor of Marseille and the local press at PSG after the C1 victory - Haaland, Rio Ferdinand… Désiré Doué shocked everyone and benefited Rennes This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇫🇷 here. 📸 Justin Setterfield - 2025 Getty Images
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Mika Zibanejad Calls World Championship In Sweden A Memory Of A Lifetime
David Kirouac-Imagn Images The 2025 IIHF Men's World Championship ended on a bitter-sweet note for Mika Zibanejad. Team Sweden suffered a crushing 6-2 defeat against Team USA on Saturday afternoon, decimating their dreams of winning the gold medal in front of their hometown fans. Advertisement However, not everything was lost. The players quickly had to shift their focus on the bronze-medal match against Team Denmark and Zibanejad admitted it wasn't easy. Mika Zibanejad Has Been Able To 'Relax' And Be Himself At World Championship After Difficult Season Mentally With Rangers Mika Zibanejad Has Been Able To 'Relax' And Be Himself At World Championship After Difficult Season Mentally With Rangers At the 2025 IIHF Men's World Championship in Stockholm, Sweden, Mika Zibanejad has been himself both on and off the ice. 'It was obviously tough, it is a tough reset from yesterday after being so disappointing,' Zibanejad said. 'Just the way we played yesterday, it wasn't hard to have a mindset of we have to play better and we owe it to ourselves. I thought we ended in the best way we could with the situation being.' Advertisement Sweden responded with a 6-2 win of their own on Sunday over Denmark to capture the bronze medal and Zibanejad even scored the final goal to put the icing on top of the cake. You don't get the opportunity to play in a tournament of this magnitude in front of your hometown fans very often, so Zibanejad cherished every moment of it. The 32-year-old talked about his experience with passion and pure happiness. 'It's going to be a memory with me for a lifetime,' Zibanejad said about playing in Stockholm, Sweden for the World Championship. 'Even though we didn't win gold, we got the bronze medal. It's a medal and we got to do it in front of our families, our friends, our fans. Advertisement 'People that might have never watched hockey before, hopefully got some more hockey fans in Sweden from it. It's a memory that I'll bring with me for a very long time.' Zibanejad has now played at the 4 Nations Face-Off and World Championship. Is the 2026 Winter Olympic Games next on his international hockey agenda? That's something that he hasn't been thinking about a whole lot as of right now. 'It's been an honor, as always, to play for your country, represent your country, but now I'm going to take some time off and rest, and then I'll think about hockey later,' said Zibanejad.