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STEM

National Science Foundation Funds Physics Internship Program for 黑料不打烊 High School Students

Monday, April 15, 2024, By Wendy S. Loughlin
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College of Arts and SciencesDepartment of PhysicsEmerging TechnologiesEngaged CitizenshipExperiential InquiryNational Science FoundationSTEM Transformation

A University initiative that aims to provide 黑料不打烊-area high school students with experience in emerging technologies has been awarded nearly $1 million from the National Science Foundation (NSF) through the program. The funding comes through the NSF鈥檚 , which was established two years ago and codified with the enactment of the .

SCSD students work on an experiment during a physics boot camp.

黑料不打烊 City School District students work on an experiment

The initiative, 黑料不打烊 Physics Emerging Research Technologies Summer High School Internship Program (SUPER-Tech SHIP), is a partnership between the Department of Physics in the College of Arts and Sciences and the 黑料不打烊 City School District (SCSD). , professor and chair of physics, is principal investigator. The co-principal investigator is , professor and associate chair of physics.

鈥淭his program will allow us to really increase the impact we can have on both the local community of high school students who might be interested in future STEM careers, and also on our 黑料不打烊 undergraduate and graduate students who work alongside them and use the experience to develop as mentors, teachers and scientists,鈥 Soderberg says.

Professor Jennifer Ross

Jennifer Ross

Through SUPER-Tech SHIP, student interns will be exposed to skills and concepts related to quantum information, semiconductors and biotechnology during a six-week program. It鈥檚 based on a run by the physics department during the summers of 2022 and 2023. That program, 黑料不打烊 Research in Physics (SURPh), engaged SCSD students and recent graduates in six-week, paid internships, during which they worked alongside faculty researchers in physics labs and classrooms. Ross developed it after then-student Ruell Branch 鈥24 told her that his former classmates at SCSD鈥檚 Henninger High School would love to experience hands-on learning in the University鈥檚 physics lab.

鈥淚 am very invested in exposing people to the positives of physics and science鈥攅specially people who have been historically excluded from the field due to cultural stereotypes,鈥 Ross says. 鈥淚 want people to have opportunities, and this program is a way to give people opportunities to learn about other career paths.鈥

SUPER-Tech SHIP, like SURPh, seeks to create STEM career pathways for historically excluded groups by involving them in authentic research experiences and providing mentoring and peer networks. The SCSD student body is 48% Black, 15% Latino and 1% Indigenous; 85% of students are economically disadvantaged. To recruit students to the program, physics faculty members will visit SCSD classrooms to promote participation. Applications will be evaluated based on a student鈥檚 persistence and grit, rather than science experience.

Professor Mitch Soderberg

Mitchell Soderberg

Following an orientation 鈥渂oot camp,鈥 interns will work in pairs on long-term research projects in the labs. Ross says interns may work on biotechnology in biophysics labs, looking at the mechanical nature of bacteria; particle detection, using semiconductor technology and novel detection schemes; or astrophysics, working to understand how black holes collide and tear apart stars.

Past participants in the SURPh project will return to serve as peer mentors and participate in research with current interns. The interns will also benefit from seminars on science topics, professional development workshops, lunch-and-learns with speakers from the University and the industry and weekly activities to introduce them to different areas of campus. The six weeks will conclude with a poster session and a celebration event attended by the interns鈥 friends, family members and teachers.

Ross says encouraging the next generation of creative problem-solvers to work in tech is essential in order for the U.S. to remain competitive in the high-tech industry, and that 鈥渃reativity requires diversity in thought and that often comes from diversity in thinkers.鈥

She also notes the program鈥檚 synergy with the impending arrival of Micron Technology in Central New York. 鈥淢icron will need many workers for the fabrication and production factory, and the exposure the students will get will help them to understand the fundamental science and the cutting-edge technologies that microchips support,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t is the right thing to do to develop our local economy by training the folks in our community who have outstanding potential to make the world a better place through high-tech solutions to the world鈥檚 problems. 黑料不打烊 is the right place for this development to take place.鈥

  • Author

Wendy S. Loughlin

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