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Home»Schools»Floyd County Students Just Won Top Honors at a Watershed Innovation Symposium. Their Teacher Had Never Won Anything Before.
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Floyd County Students Just Won Top Honors at a Watershed Innovation Symposium. Their Teacher Had Never Won Anything Before.

Nelson RosarioBy Nelson RosarioApril 30, 202604 Mins Read
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Rome, Georgia’s auditorium had a subtle scent of nervous energy and floor wax, the kind of combination you only get in a school on a big day. Students rummaged through their notes while wearing pressed shirts. Some rehearsed their opening lines in private.

The Coosa River was running brown and leisurely outside, unaffected by the prizes being given out a few miles away. Nevertheless, the river had also appeared in an odd way. On that stage, every project owed it something.

Watershed Innovation Symposium 2026 — Key Information
EventAnnual Student Watershed Innovation Symposium
Host OrganizationCoosa River Basin Initiative
Region CoveredFloyd County and surrounding Northwest Georgia communities
FormatFall projects → Spring competitive student presentations
Participating Teams (2026)Approximately 10 schools
Top Award$2,000 Keystone Award
Other AwardsPioneer ($1,000), Ecosystem ($1,000), Habitat ($1,000)
Notable WinnersBerry College Elementary & Middle, Darlington School, Montessori School of Rome, Floyd County College and Career Academy
Project ThemesStream assessments, pollution studies, aquaponics, biodiversity, beekeeping, household-product impact on aquatic life
SpokespersonJesse Demonbreun-Chapman, Executive Director and Riverkeeper

This was the Watershed Innovation Symposium, an annual event that seems like it would only be attended by parents of science teachers. In actuality, it has subtly emerged as one of the most fascinating developments in Northwest Georgia education. Jesse Demonbreun-Chapman described the format of a program that culminates in students, not adults, defending their work in front of judges. “Each fall, teachers can pull together teams to do a project at their school related to water,” he said. That is refreshing in some way. The adults take a step back. The children speak.

This year, about ten teams participated, and Floyd County schools took home an unusually high number of awards. For their efforts on Big Dry Creek, a waterway that most drivers pass without ever knowing its name, Berry College Elementary and Middle School won the $2,000 Keystone Award. Darlington School received the $1,000 Ecosystem Award for monitoring changes in Silver Creek biodiversity, while Montessori School of Rome received the $1,000 Pioneer Award for an aquaponics river fish study. Even more uncommon, the Floyd County College and Career Academy won twice, including a Keystone Award for a beekeeping research project that might have been written off as a pastime in a different era.

Floyd County Students Just Won Top Honor
Floyd County Students Just Won Top Honor

It’s difficult to ignore how little the prize money seems in comparison to the magnitude of the goal. A lab cannot be funded with $2,000. However, it will purchase beehive frames, nets, test kits, and possibly a good microscope. Additionally, that type of funding lands differently in a district where STEM funding has traditionally come in waves rather than trickles. The symposium seems to be fulfilling a promise that larger education conferences seldom fulfill: giving students access to real research instruments that they might not otherwise have.

The projects themselves conveyed a more comprehensive narrative. Some students examined the impact of common household cleaners on aquatic ecosystems—a question that may seem straightforward at first, but it becomes more complex after some thought. Others reexamined historical environmental data to determine whether local waterways were genuinely getting better or if the optimism was merely a self-satisfying narrative. Demonbreun-Chapman remarked, “We had a tremendous amount of variety this year,” and that variety was important. It implied that pre-packaged questions were not being given to students. They were discovering who they were.

As I watched this play out, the teacher’s first competitive victory that afternoon caught my attention. She had been a teacher for many years, performing the steady, unglamorous work that is seldom acknowledged at ceremonies. She initially remained motionless when her students’ names were called. She might not have believed it. Policymakers and investors frequently discuss innovation in education as though it calls for a Silicon Valley background. Floyd County is subtly implying that perhaps innovation is just a question, a creek, and a teacher who has finally had the opportunity to applaud her own children.

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Nelson Rosario

    Nelson Rosario is an Editor at worldomep.org and a law school student who has found, somewhere in the intersection of legal theory and human development, a cause worth building a career around: ensuring that every child has access to quality education and the healthcare they need to thrive. Nelson approaches child advocacy with the analytical precision of a person who has been taught to analyze systems, spot flaws, and make the case for change. His knowledge of how policies are made, where they fall short, and what it would take to hold institutions accountable for the children they are meant to serve has improved as a result of his legal education. His support, however, goes beyond academics. It stems from a sincere belief that early childhood health and education are not being adequately addressed by the legal and social frameworks in many places. Nelson adds a legal and policy perspective to discussions about child welfare through his contributions to worldomep.org, asking not only what ought to be done but also what can be required, safeguarded, and upheld.

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