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BASE Camp Gives Female Teens the Promise of Science

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BASE Camp Gives Female Teens the Promise of Science

A group of young women gathered around a table in 天美传媒视频无限制观看鈥檚 DiMenna-Nyselius Library talking about how changing ocean currents are signaling climate change.

鈥淏y studying how the ocean moves, you can keep track of climate change,鈥 said聽Veona Lanham, rifling through computer models and satellite data.

鈥淭here are higher temperatures these days because of the way the currents are moving,鈥 added her classmate Shante Miller.

鈥淚 get it,鈥 noted Bianca Colon-Hernandez, recalling the School of Engineering鈥檚rotating water tank that mimics the ocean. 鈥淗ot water comes up from the Equator,聽from the Tropics to the North Pole.鈥

What was even more interesting than the students鈥 cutting edge research was knowing that they are only in high school. They were among 23 students from Bridgeport high schools attending BASECamp, a two-week, residential camp in scientific research for female students.聽BASE (Broadening Access to Science Education) Camp is designed to engage聽students in hands-on, research-based experiences in the natural sciences,聽technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).

Amanda Harper-Leatherman, Ph.D., associate professor of chemistry and camp director, said the overall goal is to excite and inform students about thepromise of science. 鈥淭he program specifically targets young women, based on theoverall disproportional underrepresentation of women in science, math, and engineering careers in general,鈥 Dr. Harper-Leatherman continued. 鈥淚t鈥檚 part of an effort to increase interest in the pursuit of STEM and health careers after college.鈥

The camp also speaks to the University鈥檚 growing institutional commitment topromoting women in science. Serving as female scientist role models were facultyand undergraduates from the College of Arts & Sciences and School of Engineering.

Shelley A. Phelan, Ph.D., professor of biology and the Elizabeth DeCamp McInerney Chair of Health Sciences, started the program 鈥渂ecause students from underfunded, inner city schools are at a major disadvantage in pursuing careers inscience, given their often-limited science resources in high school, and the level of experience and aptitude typically required of science majors in the very first year of college. 聽By the end of the first college years, many interested studentsleave the major - not because they can't do it, but because they were behind right from the start.鈥

The six-year-old camp, including meals and lodging, is free to students, thanks to a grant Phelan received from the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparity Populations.This year was the first that engineering was taught.

鈥淪ome campers had never heard of engineering,鈥 said Shanon Reckinger, Ph.D.,assistant professor of mechanical engineering, who researches ocean modeling. Three of the students were studying her work this summer. Campers also explored the research of other Fairfield faculty in biology,聽chemistry, biochemistry, neuroscience, psychology, and mathematics.

For Bianca Colon-Hernandez, learning about engineering seemed a logical move because she鈥檚 curious about architectural design. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 talk about science much at my high school with other girls,鈥 noted the soon-to-be junior at Bullard Havens.聽鈥淏ut here I鈥檝e been talking about it with everyone.鈥

For Veona Lanham, 15, getting to know Dr. Reckinger has made her realize thatshe would like to major in mechanical engineering. 鈥淚 want to come here,鈥 said the Bullard student. Fellow campers looked forward to other activities, including college admissions counseling and science and health careers exploration.

Dr. Phelan, a molecular cell biologist who has been awarded grants to studyperoxiredoxins in breast cancer, hopes the camp will聽inspire other young women 鈥渢o pursue聽science and health career paths that will address public health issues.鈥

鈥淲e have seen so many bright young women motivated by the program, andmany already declared science majors in universities - including our own,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e hope we can continue to inspire young women from our neighboring Bridgeport community for years to come.鈥

Last modified: 08-22-13 11:37 AM

20132208

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