News

Jonesboro EAST students working on digital trail map, trash reporting project at nature center

Jonesboro EAST students working on digital trail map, trash reporting project at nature center

Pickens, Johnson and Nature Center staff pose with the QR code handouts and trail signage prototype. (Photo provided by Carman Owens) Photo: Contributed


Jonesboro, AR – JonesboroRightNow.com – International Studies (IS) Magnet School EAST students are working to create a trash reporting system and digital trail maps for the Forrest L. Wood Crowley’s Ridge Nature Center.

Luke Pickens and Krewe Johnson, sixth graders in the EAST program, have been working on providing digital trail maps and a new signage system allowing people to report trash or damage along the center’s hiking trails.

Part of the project has already been implemented at the Nature Center. Paper handouts with the QR codes to check trail length and difficulty are now available at the center’s front desk, although the signage that will be along the trails themselves is still being tweaked.

Pickens has been working on the project for the last three years, and said he got the idea because he frequently hikes at the Nature Center.

“When I first started working on it, I actually hiked all the trails many times, and so I kind of knew the lay of the land and stuff, I knew where trash was and where it mostly built up at and all that stuff,” Pickens said.

After making their initial presentation to Nature Center staff, the students are now working on a Google Form that patrons can fill out to report trash or trail damage that goes directly to Nature Center maintenance staff. The form will allow hikers to specify exactly where they spot garbage or damage and even provide photos.

Pickens and Johnson present the project to Nature Center staff. (Photo provided by Carman Owens)

“They (Crowley’s Ridge Nature Center) have paper handouts like maps, but sometimes it’s kind of hard to understand a map,” Johnson said. “So, these [QR codes] I think would be much easier, because I would say around 90 to 95% of people nowadays have a phone with a camera on it, and can scan a QR code.”

The goal is to have the project completed by the end of the school year.

“Because they’re both 6th graders and they graduate, they really want to tie a bow on this one,” said Carman Owens, EAST facilitator at IS. “It’s a passion project, so they really want to get it done.”

Owens added that the project not only gets kids outside, but also teaches them about nature, graphic design, public speaking, problem-solving, and more.

Johnson (left) and Pickens (right) pose with a prototype sign with the QR codes.

EAST, a community-service-based elective course in public schools, aims to improve schools and communities through technology and service. Johnson and Pickens said they believe the project will help the community.

“Because there wasn’t a digital map before, now people have phones with cameras on them, so it should be easy to scan for them, and so they could see about where exactly they are, how long it’s gonna take, all of that good information,” Pickens said. “And then with this, it’s like, we want to keep the place clean, you know? So, with this, that’ll help with that, so that’ll probably benefit the community, just keeping all the trails clean.”

This Week in Jonesboro

Recent Headlines

2 days ago in Entertainment

Oscars preview: Producers tease ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ and ‘Sinners’ celebrations

The producers behind the 98th Academy Awards have set out to celebrate not just the hit song "Golden" from "KPop Demon Hunters", but the cultural phenomenon of the film itself. That logic is why the only other nominated song that will get a moment on the broadcast is "I Lied to You," from "Sinners," a blockbuster hit and the most-nominated film of all time.

2 days ago in Entertainment, Music

Q&A: Shakira says she feels like she’s just getting started. A Rock Hall nomination begs to differ

Shakira is on her way to drop her son off at flag football practice. It's an ordinary experience for a mother who, in the not-so-recent past, has been at the center of some pretty extraordinary circumstances.

2 days ago in Lifestyle

Do you really need a water filter? Here’s what experts say

U.S. tap water is generally safe and high quality. But that doesn't mean every glass tastes the same, or that every building's plumbing delivers identical water to the faucet.

3 days ago in Entertainment

‘Dancing with the Stars’ pro Mark Ballas leaps back to Broadway in ‘Chicago’

Mark Ballas is returning to Broadway in "Chicago" and the "Dancing with the Stars" pro will be reuniting with an old friend. Ballas, playing slippery lawyer Billy Flynn starting April 6, will share the stage with his Roxie, Whitney Leavitt, the "Secret Lives of Mormon Wives" star who was his dancing partner on "Dancing with the Stars" last year.

4 days ago in Entertainment

Multiple gunshots fired near Rihanna’s LA home and a woman is taken into custody

Los Angeles police took a woman into custody after she fired gunshots outside Rihanna 's gated home, according to authorities and news reports on Monday.