In 2018, we conducted a study in collaboration with Dr. Shalini Kesar called Closing the STEM Gap. Our findings revealed that 31 percent of girls believe that
From mining minerals on asteroids to designing ultrafast hyperloops, the future is scientific! Expand your students' horizons of what the future of science could look like with this Science Careers of the Future poster set. Includes five 8.5x11 size posters for the following science careers: - Asteroid Miner - Water Access Scientist - Telehealth Surgeon - Hyperloop Developer Each poster includes an illustration-style ‘person’ to represent that career, student friendly definition of the career, salary, required education, needed skills, and links to FREE matching online exploration resources for each career (click on the name of each career in the PDF version for an accompanying virtual job shadow youtube video, career information sheet in English and Spanish, and fun career focused activity to test drive the career). An accompanying blog post about these 4 careers is available here (published on the ACTE blog) for reading connections. A must have for any science class, STEM elective, STEM course, or CTE program! Purchase includes set of five 8.5x11 files in PDF, JPG, and PNG file types - four career posters and one with all 4 careers on a single page. A variety of file types to use as you wish! Students can use this resource independently - a helpful distance learning activity for STEM career exploration. More STEM Career Exploration Resources: Turn this poster into a webquest with this FREE career exploration graphic organizer! Future Technology Careers Poster Set STEM Careers Poster Bundle Computer Science Careers Webquest STEM Career Exploration Project Want valuable download & go resources to help you effortlessly integrate STEM career exploration? Then get a copy of my FREE Quick Start STEM Career Exploration Kit!
These inventors, educators, and unsung heroes changed lives through their work in chemistry
Use STEM in your science activities for kids. It's easy! Just add technology, engineering, and mathematics.
In August 2006 Professor Yamanaka Shin’ya of Kyoto University published a paper reporting his success in producing induced pluripotent stem cells, and in a 2014 clinical study, tissue derived from iPS cells was transplanted to a patient for the first time. While a host of challenges must be overcome, the promise of regenerative therapies appears to be coming within reach.