Goal is to expose underrepresented girls to different career options
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Middle Tennessee
State University is again hosting a summer STEM camp for young girls
this week in hopes of sparking their interest in the fields of science,
technology, engineering and mathematics.
Running
through Friday, the weeklong camp begins each day inside the Kirksey Old Main
Building before moving to different locations on the Blue Raider campus.
“Today
we got to ride like this four-wheel vehicle, and we peddled and it was really
fun,” said 11-year-old Uwoduhi Bird, who will be going to Central Magnet School
this year. Bird’s sister Gabriella participated in the STEM program last
year, which made her want to participate as well.
The
“four-wheel vehicle” to which Bird referred was created by MTSU’s Rover team as
part of the Experimental Vehicles program and is used during an annual
NASA-sponored competition involving universities across the country.
One of the camp’s missions
is to attract girls underrepresented in STEM fields, specifically
African-American, Hispanic and Native American girls. Started by Tom
Cheatham, director of the Tennessee STEM Education Center at MTSU before his
retirement six months ago, the STEM camp is now coordinated by professor Ginger
Rowell.
This
year, about 15 fifth- through eighth-graders are participating in the camp,
including Marisa Haynes, Trinity Brown and Uwoduhi Bird. The girls dived into
hands-on activities earlier this week inside a classroom filled with excitement
and anticipation.
One
of the projects was building a solar robot, and once given instructions, the
girls began working in teams rigorously, with another ride on the Rover the
prize for whoever finished putting their robot together first.
This
team activity also allowed the girls to learn some life lessons — one team let
their eagerness get the best of them and forgot to read the instructions!
“I
learned that you have to have a routine to do things,” said 11 year-old Marisa
Haynes, who attends Lavergne Middle School.
Classmate
Trinity Brown, also 11, added: “It wasn’t that hard, but I learned to always
double check your work before you move on.”
Professor
Saeed Foroudastan, associate dean of the MTSU College of Basic and Applied
Sciences, taught in the STEM camp last year and is doing so again this year.
On
this day, Foroudastan walked around the room observing and sometimes giving
instructions to the different groups as they worked on their robots. He shared
how he wants all of the girls in the program to go to college and be
successful, and that they aren’t limited to what they can do.
“Engineering
and science is not just a man thing; females can do it, too,” he said, adding
that the campers “were shocked” when he showed them various experiments conducted
by females.
Many
of the girls already have aspirations for the future. Brown wants to be a
marine veterinarian; Haynes wants to be a lawyer’ and Bird wants to be a
pediatric neurosurgeon.
Of
course, those plans could change after this week. On Wednesday’s agenda: “We
get to cut open a cow’s eyeball,” said Bird with excitement.
The
camp ends Friday with student poster presentations at Kirksey Old Main.
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