STEM Education Innovation Programs
Submit a Program Description » The goal of this database is to serve as a searchable collection of effective practices and programs that support improving undergraduate STEM education. Use the text search and the boxes at the right to narrow the collection based on particular aspects that you are interested in.
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Activity Types
Program Components
Point of Intervention
Institution Type
Results 1 - 6 of 6 matches
Engineering Career Awareness Program (ECAP)
Travis York, APLU
Target Audience: Underrepresented Minority Students, K12 Students, First-year College Students, First Generation College Students, Undergraduate Non-Majors
Point of Intervention: College/School
Institution Type: Doctorate-granting Universities:Highest Research Activity
Health Sciences and Technology Academy (HSTA)
Travis York, APLU
The Health Sciences & Technology Academy increases the number of African American and other underrepresented students in West Virginia who pursue degrees in health sciences and science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) majors, thereby increasing the number of health practitioners and advocates in the medically undeserved communities of West Virginia. HSTA helps West Virginia high school students succeed in health care and other STEM-based undergraduate and graduate degree programs. We marshal the efforts of hundreds of mentors―teachers, community members, and higher-education faculty, staff, and students―to create a framework that supports children facing social and financial challenges in obtaining a diploma and furthering their education.
Program Components: Supporting Students:Professional Preparation, Mentoring Program, Bootcamp, Student Engagement, Professional Development:Pedagogical Training, Supporting Students:Internships
Target Audience: K12 Students
STEMcoding project
Chris Orban, Ohio State University-Main Campus
Groups like code.org have revolutionized computer science education for the elementary school and junior high levels. But for the most part the revolution has not yet reached high-school STEM courses like physics, math and chemistry. The STEMcoding project exists to re-imagine introductory STEM courses with computer science in mind. Many schools are unable to offer computer science, but they may have a physics, or chemistry or math teacher who could integrate coding into some part of their course if there was coding content that was well aligned with the learning objectives of that course.
Program Components: Supporting Students:Mentoring Program, Professional Development:Student Assessment, Institutional Systems:Interdepartmental Collaboration, Supporting Students:Undergraduate Research, Outreach:In-Service Teacher Training, Outreach to K12 Teachers and Students, Informal Education
Target Audience: K12 Students, First-year College Students, In-Service K12 Teachers
Institution Type: Doctorate-granting Universities:Highest Research Activity
Early College High School and STEM Academy: Strategies for Breaking the Generational Poverty Cycle in Rural America
Gary E. Briers, Texas A & M University
School-wide Early College--for ALL high school students at Roscoe Collegiate ISD (RCISD)--and STEM Academy designation have led to four private-public partnerships in STEM-related enterprises. More than 90% of RCISD's seniors complete an associate of science degree at high school graduation. Simultaneously, students earn industry-recognized certification in STEM fields as FAA-licensed UAV pilots, veterinary assistants, health care workers, welders, and/or computer technicians/network administrators. Because students earn a college parallel associate degree (versus an associate of applied science"often considered a "terminal degree"), graduates can and do continue to matriculate into STEM majors for baccalaureate degrees. These results are in a public school district with fewer than 30 graduates annually in a rural community of fewer than 2,000 residents. Two additional goals remain to be achieved: 90% of those associate degree/high school diploma recipients will earn baccalaureate degrees and 90% of those will earn a graduate or professional degree.
Program Components: Professional Development:Advising and Mentoring, Pedagogical Training, Curriculum Development, Outreach:In-Service Teacher Training, Outreach to K12 Teachers and Students, Presentations/Talks
Target Audience: Pre-Service K12 Teachers, English Language Learners, In-Service K12 Teachers, Undergraduate Majors, First Generation College Students, Transfer Students, First-year College Students, Underrepresented Minority Students, K12 Students
Institution Type: Doctorate-granting Universities:Highest Research Activity
BreakThru: The Georgia STEM Accessibility Alliance (GSAA)
Nathan W. Moon, Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
BreakThru is a five-year National Science Foundation (NSF) funded project to broaden the participation of students with disabilities in secondary and postsecondary STEM education.
Program Components: Professional Development:Accessibility, Advising and Mentoring, Diversity/Inclusion, Supporting Students:Professional Preparation, Mentoring Program, Professional Development:Cultural Competency
Target Audience: College/University Staff, Underrepresented Minority Students, Institution Administration, Undergraduate Majors, Graduate Students, First-year College Students, K12 Students
Point of Intervention: Multiple Institutions
Institution Type: Doctorate-granting Universities:Highest Research Activity
Water Network for Team STEM (WaNTS)
Travis York, APLU
Pacific Resources for Education and Learning (PREL), working with multiple partner agencies in the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) and in Pohnpei (PNI) State of the Federated States of Micronesia, two rural and remote jurisdictions of the U.S.-Affiliated Pacific Islands (USAPI), proposes a two-year Design and Development Launch Pilot, Water Network for Team STEM, (WaNTS). WaNTS will nurture greater participation of Indigenous Pacific Islanders in STEM fields, facilitated by a collective impact model that employs the locally meaningful topic of clean drinking water as a vehicle for both K–12 engagement and broader community organization and action. Intergenerational and cross-jurisdiction networking will meld Western STEM with local ecological knowledge, empowering Inclusive Informal Science Learning Teams (IISLTs), Advisory Groups, and multiple, local, school-based Water Quality Management Teams (WQMTs), impacting thousands of residents. A repository of locally applicable educational materials will be created, maintained, and disseminated.
Program Components: Supporting Students:Learning Communities
Target Audience: Undergraduate Majors, Transfer Students, First Generation College Students, First-year College Students, Undergraduate Non-Majors, K12 Students, Underrepresented Minority Students
Point of Intervention: Multiple Institutions