“Bias, Barriers & Breakthroughs” Exploring Challenges and Opportunities for Women and Girls in STEM

Source: Women’s Bureau, US Dept. of Labor

On March 22nd, the Women’s Bureau, U.S. Department of Labor, hosted a discussion on the critical contributions of women and girls to science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) innovation in the United States. The panelists addressed both the recruitment, retention and advancement challenges for women and girls pursuing STEM careers and courses of study, as well as the key strategies and promising practices being deployed to ensure success in leveraging the full spectrum of talent available to employers and institutions engaged in advancing STEM technologies and innovations.

STEMworks Professional Development Training September 15 & 16, 2017

STEMworks Professional Development Training Fall 2017

All STEMworks Facilitators from across the state are joined together annually to continue to connect and collaborate about the STEMworks program in the classrooms.

Featuring; Service-learning Engineering Design Workshop

Download Flyer here

Register at: https://stemworks.eventbrite.com

Opportunity to earn PDE3  Credits

Questions contact: Mapu Quitazol at mapu@medb.org or 875-2343

Girl Scouts add 23 STEM badges

By Kaya Yurieff.   Source: CNNMoney

NEW YORK — The Girl Scouts want to see more women in STEM careers.

The organization on Tuesday announced it is adding 23 new badges related to science, technology, engineering, math and the outdoors.

Girl Scouts can now earn badges through activities like programming robots, designing model race cars, writing code and going on environmentally conscious camping trips.

The Girl Scouts of the USA, founded in 1912, has created badges with the help of organizations like Code.org, SciStarter, GoldieBlox and the Society of Women Engineers.

The new experiences are meant to address “the lack of exposure many girls have to STEM,” Girl Scouts CEO Sylvia Acevedo told CNN Tech in an email.

The new STEM badges come a month after the organization added cybersecurity badges. Those badges will be available to girls in kindergarten through 12th grade over the next two years.

Previously, Girl Scouts were able to earn tech-related badges such as for learning how to use a computer and designing a website.

In May, Acevedo — an entrepreneur and advocate for STEM education for girls — took over as permanent CEO of the Girl Scouts.

Acevedo, who became a Girl Scout when she was 7, was previously an engineer and worked for NASA’s jet propulsion lab. Later, she worked at IBM and Dell before creating and selling a business software startup.

GeoInquiry Collections – New Releases

Esri just released three new 2017 GeoInquiry collections, American Literature, Mathematics, and World History! You can also view more map-based concepts found in textbooks at www.esri.com/GeoInquiries

American Literature GeoInquiries: http://esriurl.com/litGeoInquiries
• Beyond religion: Scarlet Letter
• Virus of Fear: Witchcraft in Salem
• Poe and the Red Death
• The Red Badge of Courage
• Twain: Travel Blogger
• Hurricane Warning
• Our Town, Your Town
• Gatsby: Then and now
• The mockingbird sings for freedom
• Depression, dust and Steinbeck
• Hiroshima
• Dr. King’s Road to a Birmingham Jail
• Finding Mango Street
• F451: Ban or burn the books
• Serving the Wild

Mathematics GeoInquiries: http://esriurl.com/mathGeoInquiries
• Rates and proportions: A lost beach
• D=R*T
• Linear models
• How much rain? Linear equations
• Rates of population change
• Distance and midpoint
• Coordinate plane
• Euclidean vs Non-Euclidean
• Area & perimeter at the mall
• Measuring crop circles
• Areas of complex figures
• Similar triangles
• Perpendicular bisectors
• Centers of Triangles
• Volume and pyramids

World History GeoInquiries: http://esriurl.com/worldHistoryGeoInquiries
• Medieval Europe: Invasions
• Cradles of civilization
• Post-WWI and The League of Nations
• The Reformation
• Africa’s bounty and borders
• African independence
• Silk Road: Then and Now
• The Crusades
• Russian expansion to the sea
• The first Industrial Revolution
• Early European exploration
• Trade and the Black Death
• The Age of Napoleon
• Latin American independence
• International Cooperation

MEDB Ke Alahele Education Fund awards $122,000-plus in STEM grants

Among the various STEM education programs that the MEDB Ke Alahele Education Fund supports is VEX and FIRST Robotics – dynamic programs that are helping to inspire future leaders, innovators and problem solvers. Photo from Maui High School

Among the various STEM education programs that the MEDB Ke Alahele Education Fund supports is VEX and FIRST Robotics – dynamic programs that are helping to inspire future leaders, innovators and problem solvers. Photo from Maui High School

Recently, Maui Economic Development Board (MEDB) announced the recipients who received grant awards totaling more than $122,000 from the MEDB Ke Alahele Education Fund, a grant making vehicle to further support the growing need for Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) education in Maui County and statewide.

Awards, ranging from approximately $1,000 to $5,000, were distributed this 2016-2017 school year for the following diverse initiatives:

  • Establishment of a STEAM Lab to support St. Anthony Junior-Senior High School’s 21st century goals

  • Educational materials for King Kekaulike High School’s Clinical Health Students

  • Registration and travel expenses for Molokai Middle School’s Ohi ka manu o ke ao (the bird of the day reaps its reward) to participate in competitions

  • Equipment and cameras for King Kekaulike High School students to develop their cinematography skills

  • Funding to help run the Maui County Regional Science and Engineering Fair

  • Funds to offset expenses Maui High School students and teachers to attend the Television Network Convention in Anaheim, CA in March

  • 3D printer to enable Kihei Charter High School students to produce a 3D modeled design solution to a real-life problem using Autodesk Inventor

  • Support Kihei Charter High School’s participation in Hawaii STEM Conference on Oahu

  • Support Maui Waena Intermediate School’s teachers participation at the Summer Media Institute

  • Funding for 2016 Daniel K. Inouye Innovation Award winners:

    • Lanai High School and students Jasmine and Keona Conroy-Humphrey from Lanai High School for their GIS software project which helps geolocate fire hydrants in emergency situations

    • Molokai High School and student Evelyn Haase for her invention, a pH sensor that can measure accurate data detecting the tiniest changes to the Ocean pH due to environmental fluctuations

    • King Kekaulike High School and students Maya Ooki and Jett Bolusan for their project, a comprehensive list of pests on Maui lands into a “Wikipedia-like” website entitled “Bugpedia.”

  • Robotics programs at 17 schools including:

    • Baldwin High School

    • Kalama Intermediate School

    • Lahaina Intermediate School

    • Lahainaluna High School

    • Lihikai Elementary School

    • Lokelani Intermediate School

    • Maui High School

    • Maui Preparatory Academy

    • Maui Waena Intermediate School

    • Molokai Island Robotics (Aka‘ula, Kaunakakai Elementary, and Kilohana Elementary School)

    • Montessori School of Maui

    • Pomaikai Elementary School

    • Pu‘u Kukui Elementary School

    • Pukalani Elementary School

    • St. Anthony Junior-Senior High School

“The Fund was originally created by MEDB’s Board of Directors to stimulate community investment in broadening career pathways for Maui County residents,” said Curtis Tom, Sr. VP/Island Manager for Bank of Hawaii in Maui County. “Today, we’re thrilled to see the impact STEM education has had and continues to have on our youth from boosting their self-confidence to opening doors to exciting careers. This grant would not have been possible without the generous support of the many businesses and individuals who contribute to the MEDB Ke Alahele Education Fund’s annual fundraiser dinner.”

The 2017 MEDB Ke Alahele Education Fund Benefit Dinner & Auction will be held on Saturday, August 26 at the Fairmont Kea Lani Maui. Reception/Silent Auction will begin at 4:30 pm, followed by Dinner/Live Auction at 6 pm. Sponsorship opportunities are available.

For more information about the MEDB Ke Alahele Education Fund and the benefit dinner and auction, call 875-2300 or visit www.medb.org.

STEMworks GIS Story Map Workshop featuring “Exploring the Watershed Through STEM” Module

MEDB Women In Technology is excited to present a one-day workshop: GIS Story Map featuring the “Exploring the Watershed Through STEM” curriculum. This professional development training will explore utilizing Esri ArcGIS Online to create Story Maps. Learn how to easily integrate ArcGIS into your classroom!

Registration is FREE and open to all Hawaii K-12 teachers. Spots are limited so register now: https://gismap.eventbrite.com.

Download flyer:

For more details, contact Denissa Andrade at denissa@medb.org or 808-276-7942.

25 Year Anniversary of Esri Schools Program

For over 25 years, Esri has helped learners of all ages see and understand the world better. From global operations to local classrooms, using GIS to investigate data with maps helps people see patterns that lead to better decisions.

We’ve worked with teachers, students, school and district administrators, and policy makers at state and national scales. We’ve seen GIS-enabled teaching spread from the innovators and early adopters to the mainstream of primary and secondary education.

Now, we’re more committed than ever to supporting you with better software, materials, and professional development to enhance and expand your teaching. Engaging The Science of Where will help transform education, empowering learners today to help create a brighter future.

It has been an honor for Hawaii and WIT to partner with Esri!

Hirono Unveils Plan to Increase STEM Opportunities for Women, Minorities

Source: Big Island Now

Sen. Mazie K. Hirono has announced a plan to promote women and minorities pursuing professions and careers in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).

Hironoʻs proposed plan includes two bills that would improve data collection and research on federal programs and grant activities; increase guidance for federal science agencies, federal laboratories, and institutions of higher education; and create competitive grant programs to promote more women and minorities in STEM.

“Supporting a diverse STEM workforce is critical to ensuring that Hawai‘i workers can compete in today’s global economy,” said Sen. Hirono. “By breaking down barriers to advancement, the STEM Opportunities Act and the Women and Minorities in STEM Booster Act represent a comprehensive approach to addressing factors that limit the progression of women and underrepresented groups in STEM fields.”

The STEM Opportunities Act would help federal science agencies and education institutions identify and overcome barriers that have limited the inclusion of women and minorities in STEM fields. The bill would provide universities and nonprofits with grant and recognition opportunities for mentoring these underrepresented groups in STEM.

The STEM Opportunities Act was cosponsored by Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-N.Y.) and Jeffery Merkley (D-Ore.) in the Senate.

“The need for full engagement in STEM by women and underrepresented minorities goes beyond enabling individuals to fulfill their dreams of becoming a scientist,” said Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-Texas), who introduced the bill as a House Science, Space and Technology Committee Ranking Member. “Our economic future relies on what we do now to nurture the STEM talent that will be necessary to meet the demands of an increasingly technological and knowledge-based economy.”

Hironoʻs Women and Minorities in STEM Booster Act, which was introduced by Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), would allow the National Science Foundation to award competitive grants for outreach, mentoring and professional development programs that support recruitment and retention of women and minorities in STEM fields. The law would also authorize funding for existing STEM outreach programs at the elementary and secondary school levels, with an emphasis on mentoring programs and faculty retention programs.

“STEM fields are the future of our economy, offering new job opportunities as we continue to innovate.” said Rep. Maloney. “Today, however, women hold less than a quarter of STEM jobs, and people of color only make up one quarter of this workforce. The STEM Booster Act would shift these trends and help bring more diversity to STEM fields with mentoring, internship, and outreach programs in these underrepresented communities.”

The Women and Minorities in STEM Booster Act was cosponsored by Senators Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), and Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) in the Senate.

“Today’s introduction of the STEM Opportunities and STEM Booster Acts takes an important step toward increasing America’s competitiveness and reducing barriers that deter women and other underrepresented minorities from pursuing STEM fields,” said Lisa Maatz, vice president of Government Relations and Advocacy at the American Association of University Women. “Any serious attempt to modernize our science and technology workforce must include substantive efforts to broaden participation to fully include women, especially women of color. This will in turn spur innovation as well as economic growth. Yes, this is about equal opportunity, but it’s also simply good business. Congress must take action now.”

“Locally in Hawai‘i, high-paying STEM jobs are spurring growth and boosting our island economy,” said Leslie Wilkins, vice president, of the Maui Economic Development Board (MEDB) and Director of the Women in Technology Project. “MEDB’s Women in Technology initiative continues to engage girls and women who are underrepresented in technology fields so that we can grow the STEM workforce pipeline and keep up with demand through hands-on STEM curriculum, training, mentoring and internship programs that have had a significant impact statewide. However, these programs still need support. Mahalo to Senator Hirono for introducing the STEM Opportunities Act and the Women and Minorities in STEM Booster Act to strengthen our efforts and create more opportunities for young women and minorities pursuing STEM careers and professions across the country.”

STEMworks Software Camp: AutoDesk Fusion 360 – June 14-15, 2017

Learn how to 3-D model with Computer Aided Design software Fusion 360!

No experience needed!  During this class you will create your own ready-to-print 3-D models while gaining confidence and the resources you need to be able to mentor others in using Fusion 360!

*Only for STEMworks Teachers and High School Students

2 Days: June 14 – 15, 2017

Maui Economic Development Board

Malcolm Center

1305 N. Holopono Street, Suite 5

Kihei, Hawaii 96753

9am-3pm

Lunch provided

Participants must:

1) Register online at: https://stemworksfusion.eventbrite.com

2) Download Fusion 360 onto laptop (Free) https://www.autodesk.com/products/fusion-360/students-teachers-educators

3)Bring Laptop with downloaded software

Download Flyer

If you do not have a laptop, or have any questions contact: Melinda White at melinda@medb.org

808-875-2332

Excite Camp for Girls

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Excite Camp for Girls – Molokai

A Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math program to excite middle school girls

July 10 – 14, 2017

Fee: Free (include snacks & lunch)

Location: Molokai Middle School

Download Application Here

For more information contact: Mapu Quitazol at mapu@medb.org   Telephone: 808-875-2343


Excite Camp for Girls – Maui

A Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math program to excite middle school girls

July 20-23, 2017

Fee: Free (include snacks & lunch)

Location: Maui Economic Development Board, Kihei

Download Application Here

For more information contact: Mapu Quitazol at mapu@medb.org   Telephone: 808-875-2343


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Excite Camp for Girls – Kauai

A Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math program to excite middle school girls

July 25-28, 2017

Fee: Free (include snacks & lunch)

Location: Kapa’a Middle School

Download Application Here

For more information contact: Mapu Quitazol at mapu@medb.org   Telephone: 808-875-2343


Excite Camp for Girls – Hilo

A Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math program to excite middle school girls

July 17-21, 2017

Fee: Free (include snacks & lunch)

Location: University of Hawaii – Hilo Campus

Download Application Here

For more information contact: Mapu Quitazol at mapu@medb.org   Telephone: 808-875-2343