Updates

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

  • “Tampon Crusade” Takes on Science Hill – Yale Daily News

    This article profiles one of the Yale Spring 2019 HSTEM course projects that persuaded science departments to provide free menstrual products in bathrooms. Read the full article by following this link or clicking the image below.
  • Presenting at the AAC&U Conference: Diversity, Equity, and Student Success

    From March 25th to the 29th, we attended the AAC&U Conference on Diversity, Equity, and Student Success in Pittsburgh, PA. Dr. Sarah Bunnell, Bonnie Lin, and I (Michaela Ednie) prepared and presented a poster during this conference. Dr. Bunnell currently works at Amherst College as the Associate Director and STEM specialist in our Center for Teaching and Learning and actively supports the HSTEM initiative. Bonnie (class of 2019) took the HSTEM course in the spring of 2018 and remains an active participant in the initiative. I began my involvement in HSTEM by co-facilitating the summer condensed course in 2018 after graduating from Amherst and continued on as the HSTEM post-bac fellow, assisting with the overall initiative and co-facilitating the spring 2019 course.

    I’m confident that Dr. Bunnell and Bonnie would agree with me that the conference was a lot of fun! Due to travel restraints, Bonnie and I didn’t make the keynote address the first evening, so our first event was the poster session where we were presenting. Our poster detailed some of our findings on the impact of incorporating HSTEM practices in classrooms. (Check out the full poster below!) At first, both Bonnie and I were slow and/or a little clumsy at explaining the poster to visitors. It was very early in the morning, after all. Once we got the hang of things, however, we were engaging the audience beyond just the information on the poster. Almost everyone wanted a copy of the poster and business cards. We also had the HSTEM brochure for folks to look through, but we didn’t have copies to give out. A few times during workshops or meals after the session, people who came to the poster recognized me and asked a few more questions. There were also times when the poster session in general came up and that led to more people asking questions (luckily, I was carrying more copies of the poster to give them!), so there was lots of interest in our work. I loved getting to talk about it so much!

    ​There were so many sessions that I was interested in, it was hard to settle on just one for each timeslot. I feel I learned a lot from the sessions I attended, and I met a lot of great people. I attended sessions on microagressions, inclusive classroom practices, program planning, and serving disadvantaged students. The closing plenary on disabilities was absolutely incredible; I really wish there was a video of it on the site! Amanda Kraus from the University of Arizona was such a great speaker and really kept the audience engaged. The thing that sticks out for me most was when I realized halfway through the presentation that Amanda was describing the location and contents of any images or figures that came up on the slides. She did it so naturally, and it’s definitely something I plan on doing in my future presentations. I consider myself to have great vision (with my glasses), but even so, I couldn’t tell what some of the pictures were from my position in the crowd. I was grateful for her descriptions, and I bet many others were as well. She pointed it out near the end of her talk as one of a few simple ways to make presentations more accessible. The presentation she used at the conference is included on the AAC&U website.

    Overall, I absolutely loved this conference. I learned a lot and got to connect with people and share stories. The conference was such a great experience for me and exposure for HSTEM. I’m excited at how much interest HSTEM is generating!

    -Michaela

    Picture

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  • New Science Center Celebrated with Inquiry, Demos – Amherst News

    This page details the events of the opening of Amherst College’s new Science Center. The section “Science in the Liberal Arts” covers a panel during which Julie Segre discussed HSTEM. Click the image below or follow this link for the whole story.

    “Panelists also noted that Amherst is becoming a proving ground for increasing diversity in the STEM fields and cited, in particular, the Being Human in STEM course (an ‘example of where Amherst is leading,’ said Segre) and the College-funded summer internships (‘absolutely critical,’ said Leary, who previously studied STEM engagement for the White House Council on Women and Girls).”

  • Sheila Jaswal, Amherst College – Retention of Women and Underrepresented Minorities in STEM – The Academic Minute

    Prof. Sheila Jaswal answers “How do we increase STEM enrollment for women and underrepresented minorities?” through describing the origins of HSTEM. Visit the Academic Minute website or click the image below to listen to the interview or read the transcript. 
  • Being Human in STEM – Amherst News

    This profile follows the progression of the HSTEM course, from the Amherst Uprising to the 2018 summer workshop to courses at other institutions. Read the full article on the Amherst website by clicking here or on the image below.

    “’My colleagues and I have a deep commitment to student success, and are genuinely distressed that students experience the struggles they do,’ Jaswal says. ‘So how can we and other people in our community bridge this disconnect? Especially we STEM professors, who have been trained in disciplines that view STEM as objective and color-blind, even as we bemoan the continued underrepresentation of folks at every stage of the so-called pipeline?’”

  • 2018 Massachusetts PKAL Regional Meeting

    We were at the 2018 Massachusetts PKAL Regional Meeting! Emily Ma ’20, a student in the 2017 Fall HSTEM course, presented at the student panel on HSTEM and interventions at Amherst College to promote inclusion in STEM.

    Here are some pictures from the meeting!

  • “Being Human in STEM” Expands Focus – The Amherst Student

    ​Amherst Student covered the growth of HSTEM course in one of its November issues. It covered our growth from the first course in Spring 2016, to the Fall 2017 course, also acknowledging the growth of the HSTEM community across the STEM departments at Amherst. To read the full article, click the image below or visit The Amherst Student webpage.

    “…the significance of the “Being Human in STEM” initiative, saying it has opened a vital conversation on whether it is appropriate to bring elements of one’s identity into discussions of STEM.”

    “‘It’s been a really incredible thing to see, you know, the faculty come together and organize that [curricular incorporation] piece of it,’ said Lyster.”

  • REFFAT: Tokens and translators – Yale Daily News

    This article discusses the broader scheme of increasing inclusivity and visibility in STEM courses and fields, mentioning the Yale HSTEM course. Read the full article by clicking here or on the image below.

    “Gender, class, sexuality and religion are all characteristics of a person that vastly impact their ability to succeed within the field. The course ‘Being Human in STEM’ that was offered in Fall of 2016, took a look at this issue. It surveyed students in STEM and found that women reported having more negative experiences in STEM than men.”