Maintenance window scheduled to begin at February 14th 2200 est. until 0400 est. February 15th

(e.g. yourname@email.com)

Forgot Password?

    Defense Visual Information Distribution Service Logo

    Ribbon Cutting at Patch Elementary School

    Ribbon cutting at Patch Elementary School

    Photo By Balmina Sehra | Patch Elementary Students cutting the ribbon to their new school alongside their...... read more read more

    BADEN-WURTTEMBERG, GERMANY

    11.03.2022

    Story by Balmina Sehra 

    U.S. Army Garrison Stuttgart

    STUTTGART, Germany – With the aid of a dozen students armed with scissors, Patch Elementary School
    cut the ribbon to the Department of Defense Education Activity’s (DoDEA) newest 21 st Century School,
    Thursday, Oc. 27.

    DoDEA’s 21 st Century School project aims to provide cutting edge facilities and education concepts to
    military schools worldwide. According to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, in Europe alone $1.6B has
    been earmarked for the construction of 28 new schools. Patch Elementary is the 15 th new school since
    2010.

    “This [school] creates an opportunity to better collaborate with each other,” said Patch
    Elementary Principal Sonja Rodriguez. “The teachers can provide better quality instructions for
    all children.”

    The new 113,500 square foot, 550 student school has six neighborhood areas with learning
    studios, learning hubs, group learning, and one-on-one spaces. Moveable walls within each
    neighborhood create flexible and adaptable spaces.

    DoDEA spokesman Steve Smith said while the school is specifically designed to embrace new
    teaching concepts it also emphasizes the usage of technology from a young age.

    “You cannot expose children to technology early enough, so our children from the age of
    kindergarten to fifth grade have some kind of element of technology in their education that’s
    involved in their education process,” he said.

    Rodriguez said since the school only opened up this August it will take a while for both teachers
    and children to get used to it.

    “Adapting to this new concept will take time,” she said. “Some children have adapted faster than
    others.”

    Fourth grader Mina White, 10, is one of those early adopters.

    “It’s really nice and big and you get to see new faces every day,” she said with a big smile on
    her face.

    As the ceremony came to a close the students took the day’s guests on a tour of their brand
    new school, including Deputy Head of Bundesbau (federal construction) Baden-Wuerttemberg
    who quipped, “[the school] is the most important building, so it should be a nice building.”

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.03.2022
    Date Posted: 11.03.2022 06:15
    Story ID: 432542
    Location: BADEN-WURTTEMBERG, DE

    Web Views: 36
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN