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SWE Pre-College Initiative FY12 Outreach Committee Recommendations Mary Phelps SWE Outreach Chair.

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Presentation on theme: "SWE Pre-College Initiative FY12 Outreach Committee Recommendations Mary Phelps SWE Outreach Chair."— Presentation transcript:

1 SWE Pre-College Initiative FY12 Outreach Committee Recommendations Mary Phelps SWE Outreach Chair

2 Growing the Profession FY12/13 Directive: Increase the number of women feeding engineering/technology schools by starting a community college program and developing middle / high school pilot program recommendations for SWE’s pre-college strategy and tactical outreach initiatives.

3 SWE Outreach Space Maturing SWE-branded extracurricular middle school outreach programs < 15% of membership engaged in outreach No current SWE-branded high school or elementary solutions STEM Outreach Space NSBE, AISES, SHPE use fee-based club concept w/secondary students Extracurricular and in-service programs Impact more diffused than large events Analyze

4 Critical to Quality factors (CTQs):  Increased member engagement Ease of use: one stop shop Reward engagement (individual and group)  Sustained student engagement through HS Value-added proposition  Optimal ROI: #impacted/SWE member(s) time Including significant others: parents, educators, partners Design

5 Design, cont’d Objective Deliver self-contained pre-college program offerings for SWE members and/or sections to deliver locally. Tactical Strategy Define offerings based on girls’ choices Develop 2-5 models that can be customized Club-based Service learning-based Outreach-based

6 Develop Use existing SWE programs as thought- starters Service model: STEP Up San Diego Club model: Weber High School SWE - SLC After-school program model: TEEMS Explore new concepts Virtual SME model: TBD Summer camp model: NSBE SEEK

7 Service Model: STEP Up Program Service Through Engineering Program Collaboration between high schools or after school institutions, SWE, and community Six teams of 2-5 girls; 16 mentors Four teams school-based, one GS, one BEWiSE 16 weeks, 10-30 hour mentor commitment Girls Scouts provided venue for group events Partnered with local children’s hospital to develop toys or tools for developmentally challenged children or their therapists.

8 SWE Club Model: Weber State HS High school club 15-20 members Formal charter, SWE sponsor Hands-on activities Outreach to middle school girls Monthly meetings Similar continuity issues as collegiate Club dynamics depend heavily on individuals

9 After School Model: TEEMS Program Together Exploring Engineering, Math, and Science Collaboration between SWE and Girls Inc. Recurrent hands-on activities Ages 8-14 3 sessions, minimum Formal MOU with local affiliate $2,000 grant, funds disbursed at milestones Role model training for volunteers required

10 Develop, cont’d Model specific self-contained package(s) Framework / governing docs Required resources: budget, volunteers, training Activity recommendations Self-assessment

11 Implement Deploy model packages as completed via: Aspire SWE webinars/training Funding through outreach based on milestones Offer outreach sessions at conference Promote via All Together, SWEeter Futures, RG sessions, region meetings

12 Evaluate Track participation via SWEeter Futures Pre- and post-program surveys Participants Volunteers Modify model packages as appropriate Add new models as identified


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