


The STEAM Exchange
Led by the NY STEAM Girls Collaborative Project and NYSNYS, the STEAM Exchange is a blog intended to encourage and strengthen relationships between those committed to an equitable STEAM education and workforce in NYS.
International Day of the Girl: Celebrating Leadership, STEM & Global Impact
Written By: Marguerite Copeland
Each year, International Day of the Girl serves as both a celebration and call to action. It’s a reminder that investing in girls’ education, leadership, and innovation is not just an issue of equity, but of shaping a sustainable global future. For me and the work that I do at Girls Inc. of New York City, as the G3 Data Analytics Program Manager, this day highlights why our work in STEM education is so critical. It is about equipping girls not only with skills, but also with the confidence, leadership, and platforms to reimagine what is possible.
What is G3?
Generation Giga Girls, or “G3”, is a social justice based data analytics program with a curriculum rooted in inquiry, justice and discovery. Through this program, participants learn how to use data as a tool for storytelling, advocacy, and innovation, creating a strong platform for student voice and the use of real-world tools such as google sheets, canva etc. to present their data.
“How might education transform if every classroom treated STEM not only as a subject to master, but as
a platform for leadership?”
Expanding the vision:
In addition to Girls Inc. of NYC staff directly facilitating G3, we now have an Educator Training Institute where educators are trained to deliver the Data Analytics curriculum in schools across New York City. By equipping teachers with tools, lesson plans, and facilitation strategies, we ensure that students can receive academic credit for their work. This model makes data analytics a core part of school culture for the many girls who get to experience its content. This approach raises a larger question. How might education transform if every classroom treated STEM not only as a subject to master, but as a platform for leadership?
We know the leaders of tomorrow will need fluency in technology. That is why this October, with the help of a dedicated GINYC volunteer, we are launching the G3 Coding Bootcamp, introducing girls to Python programming and the foundations of computational thinking! From loops and lists to designing their own functions, students will gain the tools to create and broaden their understanding of coding. But we won’t stop at basics, participants will also explore designing agentic AI systems, opening conversations about ethics, creativity, and the role of young women in shaping artificial intelligence. We will get to witness what it means for AI to be built with girls’ voices, ideas, and leadership at the center.
To ensure access & equity, we launched a Virtual STEM Series, opening doors for high school girls across NYC to explore data analytics. These sessions, which offer extra credit and community service, give flexible entry points into STEM while widening student networks. By going virtual, we remove barriers of geography and cost, because access should not depend on zip code. Yet even as we expand reach, we continue to wonder: How else can we break down barriers so that every girl, everywhere, has the chance to lead in STEM?
“We see girls who are not only gaining STEM knowledge, but who are stepping into their power as leaders, innovators, and global citizens.”
Connecting with Professionals and the Real World:
Beyond classrooms and screens, we create spaces for girls to connect directly with professionals in STEM industries through conferences and leadership gatherings. These spaces are where confidence is built, networks are formed, and dreams are stretched. These moments of networking and mentorship help girls see themselves in the field, envision career pathways, and practice the soft skills of communication, advocacy, and collaboration. Each conference is more than an event, it is an ecosystem of belonging, a launchpad of the next generation of women leaders in STEM. Moments like these make us wonder what new possibilities emerge when girls see themselves not just in the classroom, but in the boardroom, the lab, and the global stage?
This year, our G3 Data Analytics students journeyed to the United Nations for the Youth Mental Well-being Conference. For many, it was their first time engaging in global dialogue with youth leaders, educators, and policymakers. Their participation was more than symbolic, it was a declaration that girls belong at decision-making tables, shaping solutions that ripple out to their schools, neighborhoods, and beyond. It was beyond incredible to see them amplifying their voices on the world stage. The UN convening affirmed what we already believe: when girls are given the tools and the trust, they are not just students of STEM, they are leaders of change.
When we bring all these elements together, the UN convenings, the social justice data projects, the educator training, the coding bootcamps, the AI applications, the virtual series, and the professional conferences, we see a movement taking shape. We see girls who are not only gaining STEM knowledge, but who are stepping into their power as leaders, innovators, and global citizens.
On this International day of the Girl, we honor that vision. We celebrate the young women who are coding their futures, analyzing data to drive justice, speaking on global platforms, and building networks that span across disciplines and borders. Their work is proof that when girls lead in STEM, the world changes, not just for them, but for all of us.
Check out more from Girls Inc. of NYC
USS Intrepid Recovered Astronauts?! Exploring Space at the Intrepid Museum
Written by Jennifer Elliot
Happy Space Day! One of my favorite things about working at the Intrepid Museum is how often people are surprised to learn about Intrepid’s connection to space… something we’re always excited to share in impressive fashion. USS Intrepid served in the U.S. Navy from 1943-1974. During that time, it operated in the Pacific Theater during World War II, did three tours in Vietnam and was the recovery vessel for two NASA missions in the Space Race. In 1962, Intrepid recovered Mercury astronaut Scott Carpenter who flew aboard the Aurora 7 capsule. Three years later, Intrepid did it again, recovering the Gemini 3 capsule carrying astronauts John Young and Gus Grissom.
Today at the Museum, in addition to telling these stories of Intrepid’s role in the Space Race, we also have Enterprise, the prototype orbiter for the space shuttle program. We use this impressive artifact to engage with visitors regularly, through dynamic programming such as our Astronomy Nights and Virtual Astro Live programs. Astronomy Nights coincide with select Free Fridays at the Museum; and Virtual Astro Live programs are freely streamed; both of these programs make astronomy topics and the latest research accessible to the public. In my work with teens and youth, I teach a variety of topics such as physics and engineering design principles to encourage young women to pursue aerospace at the college and career levels. This is done through our Techs of Tomorrow Summer Youth Employment Program as well as our annual Girls in Science and Engineering Day festival every March.
I personally have loved space since I first watched Princess Leia fight for a galaxy far, far away. Now, as an adult, I get to teach about space nearly every day and I wouldn’t have it any other way. On this Space Day, I encourage you to find your own connection to space. Whether it’s by visiting the Intrepid Museum to check out Enterprise or simply taking a moment to gaze at the night sky this evening, I hope this day inspires you to pause, take a look at the beauty of our universe, and as always reach for the stars!

Jennifer Elliott (she/her/hers), Manager of Youth Leadership and Alumni Programs, has been at the Intrepid Museum since January 2014 working in various education roles with K-12 students and teachers, and most recently working with teens and taking over the GOALS for Girls program (now known as Techs of Tomorrow). In her free time she enjoys anything beach related, quilting, watching early episodes of Law and Order: SVU, and doing FaceTime brunches with her niece.
From Renewable to Solar Energy: BioBus’ path to growth and sustainability
Written by Latasha Wright
Why Science Outreach!
First I need to let you know who I am. I am Latasha Wright, a cis-gendered African American woman from rural Mississippi. I was the youngest of 5 kids. My mom was a stay at home mom. My dad was a longshoreman. Neither went to college, but they instilled in me the importance of education. Every day afterschool, my father would ask me what I learned at school today. I was a precocious kid who loved asking questions and determining how things worked. I went to an HBCU called Tougaloo College. At Tougaloo, my love for research science was born. I spent my summers in research labs at NIH and Johns Hopkins. Eventually, I continued on this path by obtaining my PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology at NYU.
In graduate school, I was a recruiter and I found that if I really wanted to make an impact on the number of African Americans or POC who chose to pursue their PhDs I needed to go to the K-12 space. In 2008, I was introduced to Ben Dubin-Thaler. He had just bought a bus off of craigslist and was taking it to schools and communities to teach kids about science! Of course, after my first day of teaching on the mobile lab I was hooked! The students were so excited and that excitement was contagious. It made me remember why I became a scientist in the first place. The students and I were discovering together how cool a piece of broccoli looked and how hairy bees were when you looked up close using a microscope. These observations led to many fruitful discussions and development of several hypotheses.

BioBus 2013
What’s your Function?
We set out to test the hypothesis that if you give people hands-on experience in an authentic research environment, that will empower them to embrace and practice science. This happened to work better than we expected. Our mobile labs are a field trip that comes to you. We park in front of schools and 6 classes come down during their normal science class to work side-by-side with scientists to do hands-on exploration using place-based science. There was a general outcry for more! In 2016, we partnered with the Simons Foundation to build a second mobile lab. The mobile labs have extensively traveled locally and as far Houlton, Maine for the lunar eclipse last year. We also saw that students wanted more and now offer after school, weekend, and summer programs as well as internships.

What’s next!
In May of 2024, the 400,000th student boarded a BioBus mobile labs. The desire for mobile lab programs increases every year. We currently have a waiting list of hundreds of requests to bring BioBus to schools throughout NYC and beyond. As a result, we are building two new mobile labs. BioBus has always been focused on sustainability. In fact, all of our mobile labs have solar panels and the original mobile lab used to run on biofuels. In the old days, we would get old french fry grease and filter it to power the bus! We have abandoned that aspect of renewable energy (due to operational challenges), but we have embraced solar energy. Our new buses are 100% electric and they will have solar panels on top as well. The solar panels power the microscopes and lab inside the bus.

Electric BioBus
The new mobile labs will double our capacity to bring science to the schools and communities who need hands-on science education. BioBus will be open to partner with other community based organizations or museums to use the mobile lab as a platform to reach new target audiences. We envision a future where every student has access to hands-on science education through a BioBus mobile lab visit in New York and Boston.
Latasha Wright, Ph.D.,

is the Executive Scientific Officer of BioBus. BioBus enables Latasha to share her love of science with a new generation of scientists. Every day that Latasha spends teaching students about science in this transformative environment helps her remember that science is fun. She loves sharing the journey of discovery with students of all ages. Latasha is apart of the Leadership Team at NY STEAM Girls Collaborative.

