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Crain’s 2021 Notable Nonprofit Board Members
Mar 30 2021
Telva McGruder Chief Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Officer, General Motors; Board Chair, Girl Scouts of Southeastern Michigan Telva McGruder works toward uniting GM’s workforce and weaving diversity, equity and inclusion into the fabric of everything the automaker does. For the Girl Scouts, she helps leadership develop and implement the council’s strategic mission, which includes conveying [&...
Read MoreBuilding Bridges ToolKits Spur Creativity & Interest in STEM
Mar 09 2021
Building bridges has a positive and hopeful connotation to it. We want to build bridges across different communities, between friends and family, and even, to the future. On March 2, St. Mary’s Ryken 9th graders each began to build real bridges, albeit somewhat diminutive in stature, in a hybrid virtual engineering lab in partnership with […]
Read MoreTJHSST Partners with Engineering Tomorrow and Mr. William Woodburn to Provide STEM labs for Students
Jan 11 2021
Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology partnered with Engineering Tomorrow, a national STEM nonprofit, to bring one of Engineering Tomorrow’s free real-world, hands-on STEM labs on Phototherapy into their classroom with a focus on: – facts and data-driven results – process skills – root cause mentality – being detailed oriented – execution focus [&...
Read MoreProfessional Engineers Bring Real-Life Experience to South County HS STEM Students
Oct 08 2020
South County High students in the STEM engineering program learned about civil engineering and bridge construction from members of Engineering Tomorrow, a nonprofit organization developed by engineers to increase the number of high school students who pursue engineering degrees. Engineering Tomorrow also provided a kit for students to use for projects at home. During the […]
Read MoreHuman/mechanical powered plasma: AME faculty/student researchers help create the future
Sep 04 2020
Low-temperature plasmas offer a world of promise for applications in medicine, water purification, agriculture, pollutant removal, nanomaterial synthesis, and more. Yet making plasmas by conventional methods takes several thousand volts of electricity, says David B. Go, the Rooney Family Collegiate Professor of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering. This limits their use outside of high-voltage ...
Read MoreNY High School Student Spearheads 3D-Printing Initiative to Get PPE to Hospitals
Apr 03 2020
A New York high school student was stuck at home, watching the news, after his school was forced to shut down due to the quick spread of the coronavirus. So he decided to put his free time to use and help bring protective gear to medical professionals. Jerry Orans, a sophomore at Mamaroneck High School […]
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