
2 minute read
College offers drone classes
from April 2023 Issue
Students looking to fulfill their technology requirements can take a class on how to fly drones.
The AACC Drone Center offers the class, UAS-111, which prepares students to take a Federal Aviation Administration exam. The course also teaches students to incorporate drones into science, industry and commerce.
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“I think it is a great class and it’s going to touch all the majors in some way,”
Tim Tumelty, an instructional specialist who teaches UAS-111, said. “If you are a business major, your business in the future may use drones. … It has a direct link to architecture, landscape architecture. … I work closely with the Art Department in video, [and] I team up a lot with the environmental science majors.”
Tumelty started the Drone Center in 2019, and also teaches a one-credit class, UAS-100, that focuses entirely on the Federal Aviation Administration license.
Tumelty said UAS-111 was “targeting people that wanted to get their drone license” but it turned out differently.
“Most of the students in the class are interested in getting their technology credit, and they think, you know, doing a drone class would interest them more than other gen-ed technology options that are out there,” Tumelty said.
Tumelty added he “learned a lot last semester” about why students take drone classes.
“I learned that everybody in the room wasn’t … excited about getting their drone license,” Tumelty said. “So, you know, I adjusted the learning objectives. What I promised this semester different than last semester is [that] I’m going to be more general and less nuanced.”
Brady Weichert, a second-year business student who is taking the class, said it “prepared” him to work with drones.
“I like flying drones as a hobby and I saw that you could, like, take this class and get your license,” Weichert said.
First-year forensics student Arman Jones said he took the class to fulfill the college’s technology requirement.
“It’s actually pretty cool,” Jones said. “The teacher is really cool, and … you get to fly drones and stuff.”
Tumelty said he hopes to start a drone club.
But, Tumelty said, “I need interest. You need to have 10 students and a president or vice president to start a drone club. Those are run by students, not by faculty. So I need to really just put the word out there, to let people know that I’d be willing to be the … staff representative for the drone club.”
Tomi Brunton Associate Editor
Theatre at AACC will perform the existentialist tragicomedy “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead” in April.
The 1966 production by playwright Tom Stoppard, which will run April 14-16 and April 22-23 at the Kauffman Theater, is an absurdist take on Shakespeare’s “Hamlet.”
“It’s one of the most brilliant plays ever written,”
Madeline Austin, a theater professor and the director of the play, said. Stoppard “does strike chords in, you know, our existence in a very brilliant, funny, tragic way.”

The absurdist play is centered on the actions of the two titular characters, who are minor courtiers in Shakespeare’s original play, as they struggle to understand their own existence within the story as the events of “Hamlet” play out.
Gabriel Duque, who portrays the Player, said the show is “wacky.”
“I love it,” Duque, a high school senior who does not take classes at AACC, said. “It’s so funny. … I find [it] very exciting and intriguing.”
Cameron Walker, a second-year transfer studies student who plays Guildenstern, said he likes the different “perspective” that the play brings.
“Guildenstern … is a confused, sad little fellow,” Walker said. “He is trying to find a purpose in life in the world of Hamlet, where it was basically written [with] not much purpose at all. He gets lost and frustrated and he’s trying to make sense of it all but he just can’t.”
AACC graduate Eliza
Geib, who plays Rosencrantz, said the play was a “cool twist” on “Hamlet.”
“I love this show so much,” Geib said. “I love the way it plays on the language, and I love Shakespeare.”