Harvard Museums of Science and Culture will present a free, live, online, family-friendly event, After-School Animal Encounters: Movement, on May 19, 3PM-3:45PM. Museum staff will discuss animals in motion. Register here at least 30 minutes beforehand to get a link to the event and to make a voluntary contribution if you wish to support HMSC.
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Letters to a Pre-Scientist: STEM Professional Pen-Pal Program for Grades 5-10
Letters to a Pre-Scientist (LPS) is a non-profit initiative to facilitate one-on-one, pen-pal conversations between students in Grades 5-10 in low-income communities and STEM professionals in order to humanize STEM professionals, to inspire students to explore a future in STEM, and to demystify STEM career pathways. STEM professionals sign up in July-August and are matched with students in September based on shared interests. Students and their STEM professional partners exchange at least four letters during the school year. Entire classrooms of students participate in the program, each led by a teacher recruited by LPS and committed to the program. Started by one teacher in 2010, LPS has grown to other schools. Tax-deductible donations are appreciated.
Museum of Science Reinstates Live Presentations
Boston’s Museum of Science has returned to offering live presentations, including Lightning in the Theater of Electricity and Science Live explorations of super-cold science, live animals and ecology, archaeology, and other topics. Live presentations are included in the cost of museum admission. Arrive at the presentation location at least 10 minutes prior to the show. Virtual presentations continue online on Tuesdays, 2:30PM-3PM, and you can register for the May 18 Virtual Planetarium show here.
Mass Insight’s Free, Virtual Summer AP STEM & English Bridge Program
Registration is now open for the virtual AP Summer Bridge Program offered free by Mass Insight Education and Research to all students in Massachusetts public and charter schools to help prepare for AP courses next year. Students can register at the following links for up to two courses (one 8:30AM-11:15AM and one 12:15PM-3PM) in each of two separate weeks: July 26-30 and August 2-6. STEM-related courses include introductions to these AP courses:
- July 26-30: Morning: Biology, Computer Science A, Statistics. Afternoon: Environmental Science, as well as Science Study Skills.
- August 2-6: Morning: Calculus, Chemistry. Afternoon: Computer Science Principals, Physics 1, as well as AP Study Skills for All.
Blue Hill Observatory Webinar: Five-Hundred-Year History of America’s Hurricanes, June 10
On June 10, 7PM-8:30PM, the Blue Hill Observatory will host a webinar, A Furious Sky: The Five-Hundred-Year History of America’s Hurricanes, in which local historian Eric J. Dolan will discuss his book of that title. To support the nonprofit work of the observatory, there is a registration fee ($10 for BHO members, $15 for others). Register to make a donation, get sign-in credentials for the webinar, and optionally buy a copy of his book.
Grades 8-12: There’s Still Time to Register for Online Rainstorm!, May 15-16
Learning Unlimited and its many Splash programs are co-hosting Rainstorm on May 15-16, noon to 6PM both days, for Grades 8-12. The days are packed with free, online courses, 30-60 minutes each and taught by undergraduates, graduate students, and experts from across the country. While the deadline for the initial course lottery has passed, you can still sign up for courses on a space-available basis until May 14. Use code NORTHE. For more information, email cloud@learningu.org. The course catalog has these STEM-related courses that appear to still have room:
- Neurons, Mobility, and Rehabilitation Engineering: Current Topics
- Basics of Biomedical Engineering
- Real Rocket Science with Fake Engineers
- Materials Gone Wrong!
- Combat Robotics or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Submit to Our Robot Overlords
- Electrifying Applications of Circuits
- Medical Technology: Robots, Devices, and Imaging
- Why do aircraft look the way they look?
- The Truth Behind e
- Social Media and Data Science
- How to write quality code like a professional
- How to Win at (Some) Games
- How to Win at (Some More) Games
- Maximum Likelihood Estimation
- Natural Language Processing (How Siri, Google Translate, Alexa, etc. work)
- Hands on Natural Language Processing (Write the Code that Makes Google Translate/Alexa Work)
- Intro to Computer Vision
- How to Lose Money On The Internet: Political Statistics and Prediction Markets
- Geography: Thinking Outside the Map
- A Battle of Forces: The Role of Inflammation in Disease
- Epidemiology: Disease Snapshots
- The Science of Happiness
- Introduction to Computer-Aided Drug Design
- Chemical Origins of Life
- Understanding Dark Matter
- From the Nature to Your Tap: Water Treatment, Quality, and Sustainability
- Human Identification through DNA Typing
- Introduction to Environmental Policy
- Advances in Super-Resolution and Fluorescence Microscopy
- CRISPR and TALENs and ZFNs, Oh My!: Advancements in Gene Editing
- Introduction to Light microscopy: how colorful can small things be?
- Crystals for Harnessing and Controlling Energy
- Big Ideas in Solid State Physics: The Riddles of Graphene
- The Cat Conspiracy and Other Mind-Bending Parasites
- Geobiology: What the Earth Teaches us about the History of Life
- Physics at the Atomic Scale and Beyond
- I’m Not a Morning Person: Chronobiology
- Psychiatric and Neurological Disorder
- This is Your Brain on Drugs: Neuopsychopharmacology
- All About Alcohol: Neuroscience, Genetics, and Society
- Introduction to Chemical Analysis
- Disability – Neurodiversity – Superpower: A Neuroscientific Examination
- Medicinal Chemistry I
- Medicinal Chemistry II
- Molecular Imaging of Cancer
- Anti-Vaxxers And Pseudo-Experts: Science Myths Reconstrued
- Psychology: Sleep and Lucid Dreaming
- Glowing brains: how science can see past the mush
- The Seeing Blind: Understanding Vision and Technological Advances
- A not-so-brief History of Particle Accelerators
- Journey through the COSMOS
- Seared steaks, baked cookies, toasted marshmallows – what makes them taste so good?
- Ask a Surgeon about Appendicitis
- Ask a Surgeon about Cancer
- The Quantum Complex
- Dialectical Behavior Therapy
- What in the World is Anthropology?
- Magic Space Balloons and You: Molecular Orbitals and How Chemistry Really Works
Clay Center Observatory: (Virtual) Public Telescope Nights on Alternate Tuesdays, Weather Permitting
The Clay Center Observatory at Dexter Southfield school generally holds public telescope nights on alternate Tuesdays, starting one hour after sunset, weather permitting. During the pandemic, the center’s astronomer and director, Dr. Felipe Santos, is presenting observations from the observatory in remote sessions over Zoom. Check the link above on alternate Tuesdays (May 11, 25, June 8, …) to see if weather permits and to get the Zoom link.
FSU Planetarium Online — AstroNights Live: No Planet B: Galaxies Galore, May 21
The Christa McAuliffe Center at Framingham State University continues its season of free, virtual planetarium AstroNights events for families (ages 7+) with an online presentation, No Planet B: Galaxies Galore, on May 21 at 7PM. In a 30-minute presentation (followed by Q&A session), learn about planets outside our solar system. View the presentation on Zoom (registration required) or the Christa McAuliffe YouTube channel, where you can view recordings of previous AstroNights events.
iCode of Wellesley: STEAM Summer Camps, on Campus and Virtual
iCode (73 Central Street in Wellesley) is offering both on-campus and virtual STEAM summer camps in gaming, coding, engineering, robotics, and more. Activities are diverse, and the on-campus programs take place both indoors and outdoors. Select from 80 on-campus sessions and 76 virtual sessions by age, date, and topic. Register online or by contacting iCode at 781-291-3131 or wellesley@icodeschool.com.
HMSC: Virtual Summer Science Weeks for Grades 1-4
Harvard Museums of Science and Culture will offer several weeks of online STEM engagement for students entering Grades 1-4 next fall. In these Summer Science Weeks, students meet for one hour per day for a week (Grades 1-2 at 9:30AM-10:30AM, Grades 3-4 at 11AM-Noon). Register at the links below:
- Spineless Wonders: June 28–July 2, August 2–6
- Earth Explorers: July 12–16, July 26–30
- All Together Now — Exploring Ecology: July 19-23
- Awesome Archeology: August 9-13