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LULAC’S 84 TH NATIONAL CONVENTION AND EXPOSITION STEM EDUCATION: CREATING OPPORTUNITIES FOR SUCCESS.

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Presentation on theme: "LULAC’S 84 TH NATIONAL CONVENTION AND EXPOSITION STEM EDUCATION: CREATING OPPORTUNITIES FOR SUCCESS."— Presentation transcript:

1 LULAC’S 84 TH NATIONAL CONVENTION AND EXPOSITION STEM EDUCATION: CREATING OPPORTUNITIES FOR SUCCESS

2 LPFI Mission To eliminate barriers faced by underrepresented students of color in STEM and foster their untapped talent for the advance of our nation. We do this through:  STEM Education Programming: SMASH & SMASH Prep  Research and Evaluation

3 Latino Underrepresentation in STEM and Importance of STEM Education  In the U.S, there will be a demand for 2.4 Million STEM jobs by 2018.  Latinos represent just 6% of the entire U.S. science and engineering workforce.  Only 2% of Latinos have earned a Bachelor’s degree in science or engineering.  Between 2000 and 2010 the U.S. Latino population increased by 43%. Sources: Georgetown University Center for Education and the Workforce STEM State Level Analysis; National Science Foundation, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, special tabulations of U.S. Department of Education Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System Completions Survey, 2010; U.S. Census 2010

4 Barriers Facing Latino Students in STEM Education  Latino underrepresentation in STEM can be linked to inequity in K-12 STEM education:  Teacher quality  Access to rigorous STEM coursework  Access to labs, textbooks, resources  Lack of STEM role models  Lack of exposure to STEM careers and opportunities  At the undergraduate level:  Few connections to STEM peers of color and faculty of color  Lack of STEM role models

5 Summer Math and Science Honors Academy  5-week, 3-year STEM-focused summer residential program  For high-achieving underrepresented high school students of color.  Currently held on 4 college campuses in California (UC Berkeley, Stanford, USC, UCLA).  Prepares students academically through rigorous math, science, and STEM elective courses.  Provides college success classes to support students in applying for college, financial aid, and scholarships.  Counteracts barriers by exposure to diverse STEM role models and building diverse peer support networks in STEM.

6 SMASH Student Demographic Data  Currently serving ~500 students.  51% Female, 49% Male 54% Latino 24% African-American 15% Southeast Asian 7% Multiple Response/Other  76% of current SMASH students qualify for free or reduced lunch.  78% of current SMASH students are 1st generation to go to college.

7 Evidence of Effectiveness  Academic year data indicate:  79% of SMASH students enroll in advanced math and science courses at their schools during their senior year.  Alumni data indicate:  91% of graduates are enrolled in 4-year universities (another 9% are enrolled in 2-year colleges).  67% of alumni declared STEM majors. By comparison, only 23% of all college freshmen declare STEM majors. Source: U.S. Department of Education,Education Dashboard: Percent Of Bachelor’s Degrees Conferred In STEM Fields, 2009

8  LPFI believes in linking direct service programs and research in order to:  Understand the effectiveness of interventions  Inform the continual improvement of STEM programming  Expand the existing body of knowledge on improving outcomes for underrepresented students in STEM  Recent findings:  Students of color perceive both internal and external barriers to pursuing STEM in higher education, and girls of color perceive barriers to STEM at a much higher level than their male counterparts.  After a five-week summer introductory computer science course, high school students of color demonstrated a significant increase in computer science skills and computer science college and career aspirations. Summary of Research

9 “My technology class had the biggest impact on me and I have learned that I have an interest in computer science.” -3 rd year SMASH Berkeley student

10 “The greatest impact SMASH has had on me was my self-confidence in math. At school, I do not like to challenge myself and SMASH presented me with challenges and forced me to rise above.” -3 rd year SMASH Stanford student

11 THANK YOU Bianca Escalante, Development Director bianca@lpfi.org Jarvis Sulcer, Executive Director jarvis@lpfi.org


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