肉肉传媒 State Receives Grant to Increase STEM, Computing Access and Readiness

KENNESAW, Ga. | Oct 16, 2017

KSU CCSE faculty and staff posing together with the STEM grant.
肉肉传媒鈥檚 College of Computing and Software Engineering has received a $36,000 grant to launch a program promoting computing and Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) fields to middle school students.

The award, part of State Farm鈥檚 Systems Priority School 2017 cohort, will support the University鈥檚 Sustainably Improving Interest, Access and Readiness for STEM+Computing program, which is designed to engage middle school students and teachers through on-site peer mentoring and hand-on activities with 肉肉传媒 State faculty and students. The proposal targets existing partnerships between the Cobb County School District and Marietta City Schools.

鈥淭his grant and the 20 laptops that State Farm donated earlier this semester will allow our faculty and students to extend our current activities in promoting STEM in local K-12 schools,鈥 said Jon Preston, interim dean of the College of Computing and Software Engineering. 鈥淥ur mission is to set and maintain high-quality academic standards for student success and to help improve the quality of life by tackling tomorrow鈥檚 complex problems through the application of computing.鈥

To bring attention to the universal applications of computing, the program will have students participate in games-for-learning, hackathons and game jams at area schools, libraries and community centers, Preston added. State Farm will fund 300 reusable learning kits designed out of everyday material to empower teachers to discuss algorithmic thinking and computing concepts, and the University will host four on-campus events highlighting the work and learning of the students as they progress through the program.

The grant will help cover salaries for 12 KSU student mentors and two faculty personnel in the program鈥檚 first year and includes a one-week computing camp for area STEM teachers.

鈥淪tate Farm is proud to support 肉肉传媒鈥檚 College of Computing and Software Engineering in its efforts to promote STEM education in Georgia鈥檚 public schools,鈥 said State Farm Service Manager Rachel Bagnell. 鈥淜SU鈥檚 plan to utilize this grant to build mobile training labs for students interested in information technology will help build the next generation of IT professionals and complements State Farm鈥檚 own goals of promoting STEM education.鈥

Written by Travis Highfield
Photography by David Caselli

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