It's Summertime! NYU Tandon Invites NYC Students And Teachers To Dive Into STEM

BROOKLYN, N.Y., June 28, 2017 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In July and August, hundreds of teachers and students will gather in Downtown Brooklyn for the fifth annual STEMNow -- one of New York City's largest and most comprehensive lineups of summer workshops, classes, and labs designed to immerse middle and high school students in science, technology, engineering, and math--the STEM subjects.

Throughout the summer, middle and high school students will get hands-on experience in fields such as robotics and mechatronics, entrepreneurship, smart cities, 3D printing, integrated circuit design, and cybersecurity.

STEMNow also teaches New York's teachers: For the past five years, public school educators have come to NYU Tandon to learn how to incorporate robotics, mechatronics, and other exciting technology into their STEM curricula. All told, STEMNow has enhanced the science, mathematics, engineering, and research skills of 350 teachers, thereby positively affecting the lives of more than 22,000 students between 2013 -- when the program launched -- and the end of this summer.

One noteworthy new program pairs New York City high school teachers with two of their own students to learn techniques of tech entrepreneurship. Another, a perennial favorite, gives 10th and 11th graders who don't have access to strong STEM programs at their schools - students of color and those from low-income backgrounds - scientific training and deep research opportunities in NYU laboratories. Both of these programs exemplify how STEMNow reflects NYU Tandon's longstanding commitment to opening engineering - with its high salaries and many career opportunities - to students from a wide range of backgrounds and economic means.

"Since 2013, STEMNow has given thousands of New York City middle and high school students their first immersion in engineering and science," said NYU Tandon Dean Katepalli R. Sreenivasan. "And when a youngster is exposed to high-level research in a university lab or encounters a passionate NYU Tandon student mentor, he or she realizes unimaginable possibilities. When teachers return to their classrooms with innovative ideas for engaging their students in STEM, it has a ripple effect on entire generations of future engineers and scientists. We're pleased to open NYU Tandon's doors so that others can be inspired by our stellar faculty and students, work in our labs and classrooms, and immerse themselves in our culture of intellectual curiosity and technology in service to society."

Why STEM Matters at NYU Tandon

According to a 2017 study by the National Science Foundation's National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, African Americans earn less than 4 percent of the bachelor of science degrees in engineering, and fewer than 5 percent of African Americans are in the science and engineering workforce.

By contrast, 85 percent of students who are ultimately served by STEMNow -- thanks in part to teachers who participate in its teacher training programs -- come from communities historically underrepresented in STEM disciplines. About one-third of the students come from families in which no one has attended college. The goal of STEMNow is to democratize access to the kind of high-quality instruction required to succeed in STEM higher education and the competitive global economy.

The opportunity gaps in STEM are not just racial and economic: Nationwide, only a quarter of the labor force in STEM fields is female, and, according to a recent study by research firm Frost & Sullivan, women make up just 11 percent of the global cybersecurity workforce.

In contrast, young women constitute nearly 60 percent of STEMNow participants. STEMNow Computer Science for Cyber Security (CS4CS) is exclusively for young women, and NYU Tandon also hosts a workshop run by Girls Who Code, a national organization dedicated to closing the gender gap in technology. NYU Tandon's focus on bringing more women to engineering is reflected in its own student population. For the fall 2017 class, a record 40 percent of NYU Tandon freshmen will be female, well above the national average for all engineering undergraduates of 21 percent.

Participating schools in this year's STEMNow include Ma'ayanot Yeshiva High School for Girls, Teaneck, N.J.; the Al-Noor High School, which serves the Muslim community of Brooklyn, and St. Joseph High School, an all-girls school serving 300 young women of all faiths and backgrounds.

For middle and high school students, highlights of STEMNow include:

    --  Applied Research Innovations in Science and Engineering (ARISE): A
        tuition-free, seven-week program designed for 10th and 11th grade
        students with little or no access to high-quality STEM education
        experiences, students of color, and those from low-income backgrounds.
        Students are mentored by graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and
        faculty members, and are immersed in challenging college-level
        coursework and lab research in such fields as civil and urban
        engineering, composite materials, mechanics, molecular design, robotics,
        sensors, and protein engineering.
    --  Creative Circuit Design Workshop: In this one-week hands-on program for
        high school juniors and seniors, students explore the architecture of
        basic circuit blocks -- the electronics in virtually all interactive
        devices. They create radios, design circuits with conductive ink and
        breadboards, learn to reduce the carbon footprint of their devices, and
        more, all under the supervision of experienced undergraduate and
        graduate electrical engineering students.
    --  CrEST (Creativity in Engineering, Science, and Technology): In this
        "camp within a camp," high school students who were trained during the
        CrEST Spring term work with NYU Tandon graduate and undergraduate
        students to run a series of one-week workshops for hundreds of middle
        school students in summer camps run by some of the city's most prominent
        nonprofit organizations, including CAMBA, Good Shepherd Services, and
        Grand Street Settlement. Participants learn about electronics,
        circuitry, mechanical systems, physical computing, robotics, and other
        STEM disciplines.
    --  CS4CS (Computer Science for Cyber Security): This initiative introduces
        young women in high school to programming, virtuous hacking, and digital
        forensics during an intensive and supportive three-week program designed
        to encourage them to pursue educational opportunities in cybersecurity
        -- a field that is growing at more than 10 times the overall job market.
        At the conclusion, students get to be cyber-detectives in a mystery
        involving the theft of Wonder Woman's iconic lasso.
    --  Science of Smart Cities: In this highly successful program developed by
        NYU Tandon and shared internationally, middle school students learn
        about energy, urban infrastructure, transportation, and wireless
        communications -- aspects of science and engineering that make cities
        more livable, efficient, sustainable, and safer. At the conclusion of
        the program, participants stage a Smart Cities Exposition, demonstrating
        their ideas, devices, smart buildings and infrastructure. More than 600
        students have completed the program since its inception.
    --  Innovation, Entrepreneurship and the Science of Smart Cities (ieSoSC):
        Taught by NYU Tandon graduate and undergraduate students, this intensive
        new program introduces high schoolers to innovation and
        entrepreneurship. After five weeks of hands-on instruction and
        mentoring, participants enter a three-week team-based workshop to create
        smart-cities devices or ideas that offer solutions to urban challenges.
    --  Tech Kids Unlimited: Technology can be a great equalizer for those with
        learning or emotional difficulties. Workshops by Tech Kids Unlimited aim
        to provide special-needs students with the 21st-century technology tools
        they require for success. Youths ages 7-13 create digital projects based
        on their affinities and interests. Topics include 3D printing, logo
        design, game design, website creation, viral videos/memes/gifs,
        animation, and coding with music, along with learning programs such as
        Adobe Photoshop and iStop Motion. Teens in the T3 (Talented. Tech.
        Team.) Digital Agency, ages 14-20, work on digital projects including a
        fire truck wiki, an app, and a website for clients such as the NY
        Transit Museum, Ohel Agency, and Semblance AR. Teens delve into 3D
        printing, UX and logo design, game design, website creation, video
        editing, stop-motion animation, and 360 video virtual and augmented
        reality.
    --  Girls Who Code: NYU Tandon is partnering with the national non-profit
        organization dedicated to closing the gender gap in technology and
        coding and teaching girls how to be change agents in their communities.
        The program immerses high school girls in computer science for projects
        in art and storytelling, robotics, video games, websites, apps, guest
        lectures, and field trips.
    --  College Credit Courses: High school students who want to get a jump on
        college-credit courses or simply explore hot fields of study can enroll
        in a variety of subjects. These tuition courses include several sections
        of calculus as well as Introduction to Engineering and Design, which
        provides a working knowledge of contemporary engineering practice and
        will culminate in designing and building a robot. Others include
        Introduction to Cell and Molecular Biology and Introduction to Science
        and Technology Studies, which explores the relations among science,
        technology, and society from philosophical, historical, and sociological
        points of view.

Injecting Ethics and Humanities into STEM

STEMNow infuses science, math and engineering with humanities and even acting classes:

    --  Dimensions of Scientific Inquiry: When autonomous drones are used in
        warfare, who is giving orders and who is responsible when the drone
        makes a targeting error? How do race and gender affect what gets funded
        for research and, more broadly, how we set scientific priorities? How do
        we teach a self-driving car how to make a snap decision about what to
        collide with when there is no other choice? These are topics that
        Brendan Matz, professor of science and technology studies at NYU Tandon
        and the Gallatin School of NYU, and Leah Aronowsky, a doctoral candidate
        in the history of science at Harvard University, explore in this course,
        in which ARISE participants tackle science writing and ethical and moral
        considerations raised by contemporary research.
    --  Acting techniques taught by the renowned Irondale theater company: The
        Brooklyn-based theater company teaches improvisational acting skills to
        help students in the ARISE, Science of Smart Cities, and ieSoSC classes
        prepare for their final presentations to audiences of engineers, urban
        planners, businesspeople, and smart-cities experts.

Touching Those Who Reach the Next Generation

In addition to hosting the students, STEMNow plays an integral part in helping NYU Tandon fulfill its pledge to the White House to educate 500 teachers and positively impact 50,000 public school students throughout New York City in the coming decade. This summer, teachers take part in:

    --  Discovery Research (DR) for Teachers: Twenty-four middle school science
        and math teachers spend three weeks at NYU Tandon as part of a
        comprehensive year-round STEM professional development program, funded
        by a $2.5 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) DR
        K-12 program. NYU experts in robotics, engineering, education,
        curriculum design, and assessment make robotics central to and
        sustainable in the city's science and math classrooms. Math and science
        teachers return to their schools supported by NYU Tandon graduate
        students.
    --  SMARTeR (Science and Mechatronics Aided Research for Teachers with an
        Entrepreneurship Experience): Public school teachers enhance their STEM
        curricula with a hands-on, mechatronics-based exploration of mechanical
        engineering, control theory, computer science, and electronics.
        Participants also learn such entrepreneurship skills as business
        planning, social entrepreneurship and technology, new product
        development, intellectual property, and fund-raising. During the last
        four weeks, teachers conduct engineering research alongside graduate and
        undergraduate researchers and faculty.
    --  ITEST Robotics and Entrepreneurship: With this new program, robotics and
        engineering drive professional development and educational enrichment
        for high school teachers and their students. Teachers, each joined by
        two of their students, learn about business planning, new-product
        development, intellectual property, and fundraising. Students
        participate in entrepreneurship competitions, develop working models in
        STEM, and improve their laboratory skills. At program's end, teachers
        receive a kit of robotics equipment for summer courses that they take
        back to their schools.

The NYU School of Engineering STEMNow program receives generous support from the NSF, Siegel Family Endowment, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, BHS/STEAM Center Schools, National Grid, Con Edison, Northrop Grumman, Autodesk, DTCC, and ExpandED Schools, and The Pinkerton Foundation.

For more information on STEMNow, visit http://engineering.nyu.edu/k12stem. For information on summer credit courses, visit http://engineering.nyu.edu/highschoolsummer. To register for Tech Kids Unlimited, visit http://www.techkidsunlimited.org/register. Join the conversation at #STEMNow.

About the New York University Tandon School of Engineering
The NYU Tandon School of Engineering dates to 1854, the founding date for both the New York University School of Civil Engineering and Architecture and the Brooklyn Collegiate and Polytechnic Institute (widely known as Brooklyn Poly). A January 2014 merger created a comprehensive school of education and research in engineering and applied sciences, rooted in a tradition of invention and entrepreneurship and dedicated to furthering technology in service to society. In addition to its main location in Brooklyn, NYU Tandon collaborates with other schools within NYU, the country's largest private research university, and is closely connected to engineering programs at NYU Abu Dhabi and NYU Shanghai. It operates Future Labs focused on start-up businesses in downtown Manhattan and Brooklyn and an award-winning online graduate program. For more information, visit http://engineering.nyu.edu.

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