Updates

Look below for blog posts and news updates about the HSTEM movement.

  • Research article about HSTEM published in International Journal of Students as Partners!

    Screenshot of "Protest to Progress" article on the International Journal of Students as Partners website

    Read the full article to learn more!

  • Dr. J named as The Protein Society’s 2021 Carl Brändén Award winner

    In the tradition of Carl Brändén, pioneer in structural biology, co-author of the seminal text Introduction to Protein Structure, and leader of the world-class synchrotron facility at Grenoble, the Carl Brändén Award, sponsored by Rigaku Corporation, honors an outstanding protein scientist who has also made exceptional contributions in the areas of education and/or service.
    Specific Requirement: Sustained, high-impact research contributions to the field and additional contributions to education/service.
  • Sharing HSTEM with Bridgewater State Physics

    Members of the HSTEM team shared their experiences of participating in the Being Human in STEM course with members of the Physics department at Bridgewater State University. We had a lively conversation and discussed the potential of BSU adopting an HSTEM course, possibly partnering with their strong teacher education program to bring HSTEM to STEM K-12 teachers.
  • Sharing HSTEM with Pomona College Biology

    Members of the HSTEM team shared their experiences participating in the Being Human in STEM course with members of the Biology department at Pomona College. We enjoyed our engaging conversation with biology students and faculty, and discussed the possibility of the department adopting an HSTEM course.
  • HSTEM Joins the Follette Lab in #ShutDownSTEM #ShutDownAcademia

    As indicated in this email from AAAS, the grassroots organization #shutdownstem has organized a nation-wide event this Wednesday, June 10th. This event urges all STEM community members in academia to stop business as usual during this unprecedented moment and commit to antiracist practices. 

    Amherst Astronomy faculty member Kate Follette has canceled the usual meetings and work with her ten students for Wednesday, and instead worked with members of her group to put together this plan to help her group discuss anti-Black racism in our country and in academia and STEM specifically. She has generously shared the document, which includes a variety of resources for us in STEM to advance our anti-racist education, with all STEM faculty supervising summer researchers at Amherst College, and has made it completely accessible to anyone. Her plan includes an exercise drawn from this workshop on Race-Privilege from the Bonner Curriculum.

    For Amherst-specific resources from Being Human in STEM students, excerpts from the statements from the STEM departments after the 2015 Amherst Uprising sit-in are available here, the results of interviews with >40 students about their Amherst STEM experiences in 2016 here, collections of ~40 annotated readings on STEM and diversity here, and case study #3 in the link here is a STEM-specific scenarioOne of this spring’s HSTEM projects was developing a workshop series centered around experiences in STEM at Amherst and what the students learned in HSTEM that they felt could be addressed to enhance inclusion in STEM. Although we haven’t yet updated www.beinghumaninstem.com with the materials from this spring’s HSTEM class, here is the draft of their HSTEM workshop proposal, and the collection of HSTEM student work as a Zine.

    We encourage everyone to join the Follette lab, HSTEM students, staff and faculty, and STEM community members everyone in committing to take Wednesday, June 10th to consider how we will change ourselves as individuals, our departments, our disciplines, and our countries to fight racism every single day.

  • Statement of Solidarity

    Being Human in STEM (HSTEM) is a growing community of students, staff, and faculty in Science Technology, Engineering and Mathematics that fosters inclusion and equity in STEM. HSTEM originated in the aftermath of the student-led Amherst Uprising sit-in at Amherst College on November 12th, 2015. The student organizers were inspired to speak out and show solidarity with student protesters at University of Missouri and Yale University protesting incidents of racial disrimination on their campuses. These students were carrying on the important national conversation sparked by police brutality against black communities encapsulated by the Black Lives Matter Movement. 

    Today and every day, HSTEM stands in solidarity with the Black community. Silence about racism perpetuated on Black and Brown communities by the police and institutions everywhere is complicit with oppression. We honor George Floyd and remember everyone that came before him. We will continue to lead the STEM community in fighting for action and accountability on higher education campuses and beyond. Visit www.beinghumaninstem.com for more information and resources, and https://500womenscientists.org/updates/2020/6/1/take-action to learn about specific actions to take in support of #BlackLivesMatter.

  • Publication of “Being Human in STEM: From Student Protest to Institutional Progress”

    Check out Surya Adams (HSTEM ’18) on the cover of the Winter 2019 Issue of AACU Diversity & Democracy and highlighted in editor Emily Schuster’s issue introduction, along with our story of how the Amherst Uprising in November, 2015 catalyzed the collaborative academic experiment by students and chemistry professor Sheila Jaswal, resulting in the first “Being Human in STEM” course at Amherst College in the spring of 2016. Spring semester of 2020 will be our 8th iteration of the course and the initial launch of HSTEM courses at University of Utah, Mt. Holyoke, and Davidson Colleges, joining Yale University & Williams College as sites of non-Amherst HSTEM courses!
  • Dinner with Dr. Bryan Dewsbury – By Natalie Braun

    Picture

    Dr. Bryan Dewsbury
    Tell me, how are you going to change the world?

    It is with this question that Bryan Dewsbury, Assistant Professor for Biological Science at the University of Rhode Island, opened the conservation with our HSTEM class.

    ​One by one, all 8 HSTEM students answered Professor Dewsbury’s question, sharing their aspirations and hopes for the future. Continue reading