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Lassonde hosts 16 students for 2020 Helen Carswell STEAM Program for Women

The Lassonde School of Engineering welcomed 16 female high school students to participate in the Helen Carswell STEAM Program for Women. This year the program ran over a two-week period in a completely virtual format. The program offered participants a paid research opportunity as lab assistants doing meaningful work in science, technology, engineering, arts and math (STEAM).

Eight Lassonde undergraduate women in STEM joined the K2I Academy Team as mentors to develop leadership, mentorship and project management skills during this unique experience. Mentors were assigned to projects and consulted with Lassonde Faculty to develop the experience for high school student participants.

Lassonde hosted 16 high school students for the Helen Carswell STEAM Program for Women
Lassonde hosted 16 high school students for the Helen Carswell STEAM Program for Women

Over the course of the program, lab assistants explored the various facets of STEAM through workshops, artistic activities and working with Lassonde faculty members on their cutting-edge research.

Lab assistants worked with their mentors and professors to explore questions connected to real societal challenges identified by the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, such as how geospatial data and crowdsourcing could promote peaceful, just and inclusive societies, and whether York could install solar panels to meet power demand and storage issues. They presented their research findings at the program’s closing ceremony on Aug.28.

Research projects included:

  • Geospatial Crowdsourcing: Revitalizing Global Partnerships, Mojgan Jadidi
  • Geospatial Crowdsourcing: Peaceful, Just and Inclusive Societies, Melanie Baljko
  • Electronic Music For Social Impact, Franz Newland
  • Green Energy in Ontario, Peter Taylor

Mentor support will continue after the program’s completion, providing these high school students with additional guidance as they explore their future education and career pathways.

Helen Carswell STEAM Program for Women

The Helen Carswell STEAM Program for Women is organized by Lassonde’s K2I Academy. K2I helps to design and implement accessible, curriculum connected and fun STEM programming at the elementary and high school levels that encourage students who may not otherwise consider STEM as a viable option for them. K2I Academy is committed to building innovative collaborative partnerships to enhance STEM teaching and learning. It is committed to building sustainable programs that focus on equitable and inclusive program design that strives to diversify the STEM profession – kindergarten to industry. For more information on the K2I Academy, email k2i@lassonde.yorku.ca.

The Helen Carswell STEAM Program for Women was made possible due to a generous gift from the Carswell Family Foundation.

Helen Carswell was a registered nurse by trade who demonstrated an entrepreneurial spirit. Most notably in 1974, Carswell co-founded Optech Inc. with her husband Allan I. Carswell. Today, Teledyne Optech is a world leader in high-tech lasers with systems on all seven continents, in space and on the surface of Mars.

Throughout her life, Carswell has been active in the arts, playing piano and the violin and singing for many years. She dedicated much of her community service and philanthropic affairs to supporting arts-based programs. The Helen Carswell STEAM Program for Women marks an exciting development in Lassonde’s commitment to advancing equity, diversity and inclusion in STEAM.

Courtesy of YFile.