STEM Equity Initiative Blog
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A Celebration of STEM Students and Educators at the VEX Unified Robotics Tournament
Had an incredible time at Unified Robotics at Hopewell Area High School, where students of all abilities teamed up to design, build, and compete in an inclusive and inspiring STEM challenge. From coding precision-driven robots to problem-solving in real-time, the event showcased teamwork, innovation, and resilience. The energy was electric as students cheered each other on, proving that robotics is about more than competition—it’s about empowerment and community.
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Understanding the Current State: Reflections from the STEM Equity Initiative
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Prepping for your CLNA 2023
Some tips for preparing for your upcoming meeting with stakeholders to conduct a Comprehensive Local Needs Assessment (CLNA),
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Better Assessing the Whole Child to Achieve Higher Academic Outcomes
The long-held convention of focusing on academic assessments without understanding or assessing students’ social and emotional development is a missed opportunity and has left us unable to see, understand, and appreciate the whole child.
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Data Literacy as a Tool for Program Improvement
Trying to understand how to improve student academic interest and performance in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) and specifically career and technical education (CTE) courses, programs, and careers is not easy because of the exhaustive number of variables involved. Students and their experiences, culture, caregivers, adolescent development, prior education (or access), language development, socioeconomic factors, employment options, class, gender, race, community life (and more) all add data to the education equation we are trying to solve.
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Questions from the field: How do we continue to increase numbers of male and female students in educational programs that are nontraditional for them?
I’m often asked the questions, “How can we affect changes in student selection decisions for career and technical education (CTE) programs of study?” and “How can I convince a girl entering high school to consider a program in manufacturing or building trades or a boy entering high school to consider a nursing program?” Because so many potential factors influence student course and program choices (e.g., parents, peers, prior learning, cultural bias, hormones, and more), how can educators ensure the all students have full access to any and all of the CTE programs? Equally important, how can educators ensure that progress toward increasing enrollment for traditionally underrepresented students continue over time?
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Questions from the field: the Elephant in the Room
Use this blog post to ask anonymous questions about race, gender, and equity broadly, or comments and suggestions to open the discussion.
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