Icon for: Karen Harrington

KAREN HARRINGTON

Center for Youth Engagement
Public Discussion

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  • Icon for: Mark Rosin

    Mark Rosin

    Higher Ed Faculty
    May 14, 2018 | 08:23 a.m.

    This project is great! Thanks for sharing.

    I was wondering what sort of tools you give students to help them overcome the barriers that the gatekeepers to STEM professions may throw up at them, because they have a history of incarceration?

     
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    Sarah Hampton
  • Icon for: George Hein

    George Hein

    Facilitator
    Professor Emeritus
    May 14, 2018 | 08:48 a.m.

    Bravo for developing this much-needed program. The emphasis on personal values as an effort to link potential students with successful STEM professionals seems particularly powerful.  Did you focus on other key factors before that were not as successful?

  • Icon for: Karen Harrington

    Karen Harrington

    Lead Presenter
    Senior Research Fellow
    May 16, 2018 | 08:43 a.m.

    Thanks for the positive comments on our project.  Prior to our focus on values, we tried using interest inventories as a way to frame career exploration.  However, the feedback we received from students in our co-design process demonstrated that interests were not as powerful a hook for thinking about a possible STEM career as were shared values. 

  • Icon for: Karen Harrington

    Karen Harrington

    Lead Presenter
    Senior Research Fellow
    May 14, 2018 | 09:06 a.m.

    Thanks for watching our video about STEM-focused career development for incarcerated youth.  We would appreciate hearing your ideas around ways to increase awareness and interest in STEM careers among marginalized learners.  Our curriculum uses Universal Design for Learning and the co-design process; we'd love to hear your thoughts about how we integrated these approaches in working with this unique population of students. 

     

  • Icon for: Shabnam Brady

    Shabnam Brady

    Graduate Student
    May 14, 2018 | 12:54 p.m.

    Great project and idea! How did you choose the particular sites for participant recruitment? 

  • Icon for: Karen Harrington

    Karen Harrington

    Lead Presenter
    Senior Research Fellow
    May 16, 2018 | 08:46 a.m.

    Thanks for watching and commenting on our project's video.  We worked with the Massachusetts Department of Youth Services office, which oversees all educational services in our state, to choose which juvenile justice facilities we would partner with for both the pilot and research studies.  

  • Icon for: Rachel Shefner

    Rachel Shefner

    Facilitator
    Associate Director
    May 14, 2018 | 05:05 p.m.

    Amazing project, and I really like the spotlight on values as a lever for connecting the students to the representatives of STEM jobs. I understand that the curriculum focus is on developing interest, motivation and building STEM-positive identity in the students, but I am wondering if once the interest is developed, does it lead to an increase in motivation in the students to engage in STEM-specific coursework that could lead to these jobs? 

     
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    Sarah Hampton
  • Icon for: Karen Harrington

    Karen Harrington

    Lead Presenter
    Senior Research Fellow
    May 16, 2018 | 08:55 a.m.

    Thank you for the positive feedback about our project.  Our research study, which will be conducted next academic year, will explore whether STEM career exploration leads to increased motivation in students to complete the relevant coursework necessary to pursue a job in STEM.  This career unit is part of a larger biology curriculum which also uses Project-Based Learning, UDL, and the co-design process.  The STEM career exploration process will be embedded throughout the biology curriculum to more explicitly link what students are learning in science class to future jobs in the STEM field. 

     
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    Rachel Shefner
  • Icon for: Rachel Shefner

    Rachel Shefner

    Facilitator
    Associate Director
    May 16, 2018 | 09:21 a.m.

    Great! I look forward to hearing about what you find. 

  • Icon for: Sarah Hampton

    Sarah Hampton

    Facilitator
    MS Math and Science Teacher, Volunteer STEAM Coordinator
    May 15, 2018 | 11:56 a.m.

    One of my favorite things about the STEM For All Showcase is seeing how researchers are addressing complex, systematic issues. You're right. This is a marginalized population that perhaps needs the greatest intervention and highest quality resources yet often receives the least and lowest. Your work seems like a great first step in giving these youth access to STEM careers. How will you build on this project or connect them to follow-up opportunities to capitalize on the interest you may generate?

  • Icon for: Laura Rodriguez

    Laura Rodriguez

    Graduate Student
    May 16, 2018 | 08:05 a.m.

    Thank you for presenting your video on such important work. I am wondering if your curriculum addresses any other constructs - in addition to shared values with STEM professionals - that contribute to a sense of agency in STEM fields and a STEM identity Do students have opportunities to work collaboratively to explain natural phenomena or solve problems where they can get a sense of competence in STEM understandings and performances? How are their accomplishments acknowledged or recognized so that they can internalize a sense of accomplishment? 

  • patricia Harrington

    May 16, 2018 | 07:19 p.m.

    Amazing program.  Gives me hope for the future.  Great presentation.  very concise and  informative. 

     

  • Icon for: Bridget Dalton

    Bridget Dalton

    Higher Ed Faculty
    May 16, 2018 | 07:21 p.m.

    This is such important work!  I especially appreciate your co-design process and the focus on values as a way of connecting youth who are incarcerated to possible futures in STEM.  I look forward to learning more about your work.  Will you be measuring outcomes, and do you have any publications about this work?

     
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    Sarah Hampton
  • Sarah Fefer

    Researcher
    May 16, 2018 | 10:44 p.m.

    I loved learning more about your project through this video.  What important and meaningful work!  I'm proud to have you all as UMass colleagues and can't wait to talk more about your work :) 

  • Icon for: Daniel Miller-Uueda

    Daniel Miller-Uueda

    Higher Ed Administrator
    May 17, 2018 | 08:14 a.m.

    This is absolutely inspiring, transformative work. Thank you for your effort in this space!

     
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    Sarah Hampton
  • Icon for: Lucia Dettori

    Lucia Dettori

    K-12 Administrator
    May 18, 2018 | 07:45 a.m.

    Karen

    I was excited to learn about your project! As you might know Chicago Public Schools has made a year of CS a graduation requirement for all HS students starting with the class of 2020. This is the result of several years of work with CAFECS (the Chicago Alliance for Equity in Computer Science) With 97 high schools in the district we have a couple of them that serve primarily incarcerated youth. I'd like to connect with you and see what we can learn from you and adapt to our schools.

    Great work

     

     

  • Icon for: Karen Harrington

    Karen Harrington

    Lead Presenter
    Senior Research Fellow
    May 18, 2018 | 12:15 p.m.

    Lucia, I really enjoyed your CafeCS video and would love to talk about ways our projects with incarcerated youth overlap.  Please email when you get a chance at karenh@umass.edu

  • Icon for: ellen furuya

    ellen furuya

    Higher Ed Administrator
    May 21, 2018 | 09:30 a.m.

    Fascinating initiative and great coverage in Forbes.com.  What have been some of the unique challenges of gaining access and working with incarcerated youth? 

  • Icon for: Michael Briscoe

    Michael Briscoe

    Researcher
    May 21, 2018 | 01:20 p.m.

     I just wanted to echo that this work is important and inspiring. Any chance that some of these educational resources are publicly available? In particular, the STEM-occupation videos could be useful in a variety of settings. I hope this research continues to be fruitful!

  • Icon for: Diane Smoot, Ph.D.

    Diane Smoot, Ph.D.

    Higher Ed Faculty
    May 21, 2018 | 07:49 p.m.

    Thank you for the fascinating view of Universal Design in Learning in action. The videos of the STEM professionals linked by values were powerful. Day of Cyber does something similar when they link professions by learning style (https://www.nsadayofcyber.com/). Your efforts with the youth remind me of Code.7370. (https://thelastmile.org/). I applaud you for your important work and look forward to reading about your future progress.

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