Science camp runs on girl power
While her peers slept in during school vacation week, 16-year-old Diana Perez of Everett woke up at 4 AM for an epic commute that began in darkness at a snow-covered bus stop, continued with a transfer to another bus, and ended with a car ride from a friend to arrive in Lexington at 8:30 AM.
Her destination: a science camp at Minuteman Career and Technical High School. “I didn’t want to miss it,” Perez said. “So I had to get here.”
It was an uncommon display of determination, but the four-day camp is unlike anything else offered to teenage girls interested in science and math. The campers are middle school girls mentored by high school students like Perez, who encourage them to stick to their studies of so-called STEM subjects: science, technology, engineering, and math.
Research has shown that girls often lose interest in science-related subjects in middle school, favoring other subjects that emphasize verbal or other skills. The camp seeks to keep them on track, while creating a pipeline of students primed for highly skilled jobs that come with a good paycheck — and continue to be in great demand.
At Minuteman, a school of about 650 students, only about 15 percent of females, or fewer than 30 girls a year, graduate with an emphasis in STEM.
Minuteman’s superintendent, Ed Bouquillon, has declared 2015 the year of “girls in STEM” and asked staffers and students to create a camp that will encourage more girls to pursue the fields. In technology alone, the Department of Labor predicts 1.4 million jobs will be created in computing fields by 2020. But US citizens are expected to fill only about 30 percent of them, and American women are expected to fill just three percent.
“We needed to do something,” Bouquillon said. “We’re not going to fill all the jobs that are out there for young people in STEM fields without tapping into young women and getting them interested in it. The vacation-week camp was the brainchild of about 20 Minuteman female students, including Perez, and their adviser, engineering teacher Becky Quay. About 30 middle school students arrived by bus each morning this week to undertake math projects and science experiments and to take apart computers under the tutelage of high school girls.
Middle school girls studying math for the day, for example, used graphs and pie charts to tell a story. Some simply told what a student ate that day, while others added imagination to chart the fluctuations in unicorn herd populations. The group also made tie-dyed shirts to study geometric theory and played games with dice to explore probabilities.
Tristan O’Connor, a junior at Minuteman whose favorite subject is math, guided girls through a game of “Math Twister” on the floor of a science lab, which led students to become entangled as she directed them to find coefficients and prime numbers with their hands and feet.
O’Connor said she was in sixth grade when a teacher recognized her math skills and challenged her to do more. Today she takes math courses two years above her grade level and hopes to inspire younger girls to develop an appreciation for math.
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