STEM AmeriCorps Program to
Expand with Best Buy Grant
National service agency also announces new partners, locations
WASHINGTON, D.C. – As part of
today’s White House Science Fair, the Corporation for National and Community
Service (CNCS) today announced an expansion of STEM AmeriCorps, an initiative
designed to spur student interest in science, technology, engineering, and math
education.
A grant from Best Buy will place 20 AmeriCorps VISTA members at Best Buy
Teen Tech Centers in eight locations: Chicago, Denver, Miami, Minneapolis, New
York City, San Antonio, Seattle, and Washington, D.C. These AmeriCorps members will help low-income
teens to participate in the FIRST robotics competition. FIRST, through its AmeriCorps VISTA
program, is one of 10 national partners supported by the Best Buy Foundation to
help underserved teens build 21st century skills and bridge the Digital Divide.
“AmeriCorps members have a positive and lasting
impact on the toughest challenges facing our communities, but we know they are
especially valuable to the education community,” said Wendy Spencer, CEO of the
Corporation for National and Community Service, which administers AmeriCorps.
“By strengthening STEM education for students, especially those from low-income
backgrounds, STEM AmeriCorps will spark greater interest in math and science
and build ladders of opportunity these students might otherwise never have. I’m
grateful for Best Buy’s support in helping us achieve this mission.”
“While it
is more important than ever for today’s youth to be tech-savvy and develop
21st-century skills that prepare them for future success, far too many teens
still lack access to technology. As a
result, they fall behind their peers. Best Buy is on a mission to provide these
teens with opportunities by leveraging our local community presence, technology
resources and talented employees to deliver creative, engaging tech learning
programs for youth,” said Susan Bass Roberts, Senior Director of Community
Relations and Diversity and Inclusion at Best Buy. “Working with FIRST and AmeriCorps VISTA
bring more resources to help accomplish this important goal.”
The Best Buy grant will strengthen CNCS’s decade-long
partnership with FIRST, a nonprofit founded by inventor Dean Kamen to
inspire an appreciation of science and technology in young people through
robotics competitions. At the 2013 White House Science Fair, President
Obama announced that 50 full-time AmeriCorps VISTA members will serve with
FIRST in low-income communities across the country. AmeriCorps VISTA
members currently serve with FIRST in 26 states, where they recruit volunteers
and support teams of students to participate in FIRST competitions, making it
possible for more students to be exposed to the STEM fields.
CNCS also announced plans to expand its summer STEM AmeriCorps program
into new states. Last
year, the federal agency placed 256 AmeriCorps VISTA members in Alabama,
Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, and West Virginia. This
initiative connected more than 20,500- at-risk students in low-performing
schools to STEM opportunities.
First announced by President Obama at the White
House Science Fair in 2013, STEM AmeriCorps is a multi-year effort to place
hundreds of AmeriCorps members in nonprofits across the country to inspire
young people to excel in STEM education. Current STEM AmeriCorps initiatives
include partnerships with FIRST, Maker Education Initiative, Citizen Schools, US2020,
Teach For America, and other organizations – efforts collectively engaging tens
of thousands of students in STEM learning.
STEM AmeriCorps advances the goals of the
President’s Task Force on Expanding National Service to build public-private
partnerships that expand opportunities for Americans to serve and increase the
impact citizens have on our communities and nation.
The Obama administration has made STEM education a
major priority. In 2009, the President launched “Educate to Innovate,” a
nationwide effort to move American students from the middle to the top of the
pack in science and math achievement over the next decade.
STEM AmeriCorps advances this national priority by
using national service to spur greater interest by K-12 students in the STEM
professions. The goals of STEM AmeriCorps include improving academic
performance in STEM coursework, expanding the number of students on track to
graduate ready for college and for careers in STEM fields, increasing
interactions between youth and STEM professionals, and sparking the imagination
and interest of students to pursue STEM subjects.
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