The Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics will host its Public Observatory Night online on March 16, 7PM-8PM, with a livestream of Monitoring Air Pollution from Space, presented by Caroline Nowlan, a physicist in the CfA’s Atomic and Molecular Physics Division. The event will be streamed on the CfA’s Facebook and YouTube channels.
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Grades 6-12: Apply by Mar. 17 for Beantown Bash “Anti-Hackathon,” Apr. 1
Beantown Bash is an “anti-hackathon” to be held at Tufts University (Joyce Cummings Center, 177 College Avenue, Medford) on April 1. Unlike other hackathons, it’s focused on creating, without presentations; the creations do not have to be tech-related; and results will be judged by peer participants. Suggested project tracks include:
- Refry Rehash: Mixing and matching favorite things to make something new
- New Connect: Finding new ways to meaningfully connect people
- Small Data, Big Ideas: Exploring information on the community level
It’s free. While it’s focused on high school, middle-school students are welcome. Register by March 17 — individually or as a team of up to four.
Grades 8-12: Northeastern Splash!, In-Person, Mar. 18
Each spring, NEPTUN (a Northeastern University student group) hosts Splash!, a free program for students in Grades 8-12 to take fun and informative mini-classes led by Northeastern undergraduate students. This year, Splash! will again be held in-person at Ryder Hall on the Northeastern campus, on March 18, 8:30AM-6:40PM. The $0 cost includes free pizza and a T-shirt. Registration is now open and is first-come/first-served and requires setting up a free student account. For more information, see the FAQs or contact nu.neptun@gmail.com. You can also access online recordings of Digital Splash! courses from 2020. Among the 26 in-person Splash! courses this year are these STEM offerings:
- Need a Hand?
- The Spaghetti Challenge
- Electronics and Soldering Workshop
- Egg Drop Challenge
- Origami for fun and profit, part 2
- Thinking Outside the Cardboard Box: Prototyping with Cardboard!
- Medical Devices, Medicine, 3D Printed Organs: Let’s talk Bioengineering!
- The Key to Unlocking Data: An Intro to Database Management
- The Lore of Languages: How Coding Came to Be
- The Entire Internet in an Hour!
- AI Q&A with an introduction
- The Fermi Paradox: Where is Everyone?
- Miraculous 3-Pound Jell-O
- Speculative Evolution
- Funky Science: DIY Lava Lamps
- Color me Intrigued: Playing with ROY G BIV
- We all scream for ChemE Ice Cream
- Real Life Sci-Fi: Gene Editing
Newton Schools Foundation seeks donations for Calculus Project
The Calculus Project works in all of Newton’s middle and high schools to have more Hispanic, African American, and low-income students successfully complete calculus in high school, as a path to success in college. The program provides intensive, small-group summer classes, enrichment activities, and year-round mentoring and tutoring. The TCP summer program includes instruction in Computer Science, field trips to STEM-related companies, and college campus visits for rising 11th graders with a focus on STEM majors and careers.
The program currently includes over 200 students in Grades 8-12 — 95% of whom are in honors or accelerated math. The Newton Schools Foundation seeks donations to expand the program to address a growing waitlist.
While the NPS operating budget funds part of the program, tax-deductible donations via the NSF are needed for the summer program, tutoring, enrichment activities, and supplies. This year’s campaign is $3,000 short of its $10,000 goal. Donate here.
Nitsch Engineering’s Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day, Mar. 22
Nitsch Engineering invites girls in Grades 6-12 (optionally with adult chaperones) to their Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day on March 22, 9AM-2PM at Tufts University (Joyce Cummings Center, 177 College Avenue, Medford). The focus is on transportation engineering and roadway design. It’s free. Register by March 17, 6PM.
Harvard Medical School: Summer MEDscience Programs, Apply by Mar. 25
Harvard Medical School’s MEDscience summer program for Grades 9-12 offers three one-week programs and one two-week program, following four different curricula:
- MEDscience@HMS (clinical): hands-on, active learning in realistic, dynamic, simulated medical emergencies, offered each week, June 12 through August 18.
- MEDscienceLAB (research based): hands-on lab and clinical experience in research and medical simulation, offered each of the weeks beginning June 10, 17, and August 7.
- MEDscienceLab Forensics (research based): research underlying investigations of simulated crime scenes, offered each of the weeks beginning June 12, 26, July 24, and August 14.
- MEDscience Moonshot (clinical): deep immersion into biomedical engineering, computer science and medicine at Harvard Medical School’s medical simulation labs and research lab, with design thinking through IDEO Cambridge, two weeks July 24-August 4.
All programs are in-person, non-residential, on the medical-school campus. Scholarships are available for Boston-area residents, awarded based on student essays and teacher assessments. Apply by March 25. For more information, email hmsmedscience@hms.harvard.edu or call 617-432-7047.
McAuliffe Center: Stargazing, Mar. 27
The Christa McAuliffe Center at Framingham State University will host a free evening of stargazing and observation on March 27, 8:15PM-9PM (weather permitting), in front of May Hall on FSU’s campus in Framingham. For more information, email cmc@framingham.edu.
Grades 5-12: Register for Clark University’s Spring Splash, Apr. 2
Clark University’s Spring Splash — a one-day program offering classes for students in Grades 5-12 — will be held April 2, 10AM-5PM on the Clark campus (950 Main St., Worcester). Students should register as soon as possible because classes fill up. The day is free, with lunch included. For more information, email clarkuesp@gmail.com. See the course catalog for STEM classes such as:
- Astronomy
- The Science of Sleep and Dreams
Girls Who Code: Summer Programs, Grades 9-12, apply by Mar. 24
Girls Who Code invites high school students who want to build computer-science skills, community, and a professional network to apply for Girls Who Code’s free Summer Programs by March 24. They will find friends and opportunities with learning tracks like game design in the live Summer Immersion Program or data science in the Self-Paced Program. The programs are open to those with no experience as well as those who have participated in past summers. Girls Who Code encourages all girls and non-binary students in Grades 9-12 to apply.
IQ Learning: Summer STEM Camp in Brookline, Grades 4-7
IQ Learning will again offer its summer camp, STEM Mysteries: Breaking the Code, August 21-25, at United Parish in Brookline’s Coolidge Corner, for students entering Grades 4-7. Only 20 spots are available. IQ Learning and its summer STEM camp were started last year by two certified, experienced, Harvard-trained teachers and math specialists, Cristina and Shephali, who met while working together in the Watertown Public Schools.
The aim of their STEM camp is to have kids engage in long-term STEM projects inspired by exciting themes and enable students to make connections to STEM concepts that they experience on interactive field-trips. This year’s STEM program will explore optical illusions, time travel, and breaking codes with the end goal of creating the camp’s own escape room. Sign up here. For more information, email iqlearning314@gmail.com.