$1.25 Million Awarded to Support STEAM Education for Delta Students

Tameka Bailey, center, talks with students at a lab.
Photo by University Relations

Tameka Bailey, center, talks with students at a lab.

The Science Education Partnership Award program awarded the U of A $1.25 million to support STEAM education (science, technology, engineering, art and math) for underrepresented students. 

The five-year grant will be used to introduce and advance opportunities to engage in the STEAM fields for both students and teachers. Tameka Bailey, an assistant professor of biological sciences, is the grant’s project director. This is the first time the university has received a grant from the Science Education Partnership, which is sponsored by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, a component of the National Institutes of Health.

People of color are underrepresented in STEAM education and careers, often due to gender, socioeconomic and cultural factors. Early access to, and success in, STEAM classes is often a predictor in whether students will pursue a STEAM major and eventual career. As such, getting students engaged, interested and thinking about STEAM disciplines early is critical to nurturing a lifelong pursuit.

A key component of the grant is a one-week STEAM summer program at the U of A. The program targets rising sixth graders from Reed Elementary in Dumas, which is largely rural, low-resource and African American. 

The program has three primary goals:

  1. To improve STEAM awareness, academic performance and efficacy, future orientation, graduation rates, and college enrollment for 400 rising sixth grade students in Dumas.
     
  2. To improve STEAM teaching performance and efficacy for STEAM teachers in Dumas.
     
  3. To build college savings for STEAM Summer Program participants and their families through $50 seed deposits in an AR Gift Fund for 400 students.

“As an underrepresented minority within the STEM disciplines, it’s very important to me that we change the demographic — the representation that’s within those disciplines,” Bailey said. “I want to connect the two communities — my home in Fayetteville and my native home of Gould and Dumas. For me, growing up, opportunity was everything. Had I not been exposed to STEM very early on, I would not have become a research scientist.”

Tameka Bailey

She added studies show that around the fifth grade students decide what they’re going to be in life. The earlier that students are exposed to the STEAM disciplines, the more likely they will study those disciplines. “And by exposing them to the University of Arkansas, the more likely they are to attend the University of Arkansas. So, we want to put the university at the top of their radar.”

This grant represents a significant advancement of the university’s diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. Yvette Murphy-Erby, the vice chancellor of diversity, equity and inclusion, noted the grant reflects the university’s community-based effort that “aligns perfectly with our land-grant, academic and research missions, focuses on STEAM education and preparation for post-secondary education success, and targets an underserved community in the state that is in need of much support.” 

She added, “Dr. Bailey is from the community, and it was her vision that started the camp and her willingness to collaborate with others on campus to broaden the effort in this meaningful, innovative and difference making way.” 

Key collaborators in shaping the curriculum and grant proposal also included Marcia Shobe, director of research in the Office for Diversity and Inclusion; Douglas Rhoads, University Professor of biological sciences; and Michael Daughtery, Distinguished Professor of STEM education.

According to its website, the Science Education Partnership Award “funds innovative science, technology, engineering and mathematics and Informal Science Education educational projects for pre-kindergarten to grade 12. SEPA projects create partnerships among biomedical and clinical researchers and teachers, schools, museums, science centers, media experts and other educational organizations.”

About the University of Arkansas: As Arkansas' flagship institution, the U of A provides an internationally competitive education in more than 200 academic programs. Founded in 1871, the U of A contributes more than $2.2 billion to Arkansas’ economy through the teaching of new knowledge and skills, entrepreneurship and job development, discovery through research and creative activity while also providing training for professional disciplines. The Carnegie Foundation classifies the U of A among the few U.S. colleges and universities with the highest level of research activity. U.S. News & World Report ranks the U of A among the top public universities in the nation. See how the U of A works to build a better world at Arkansas Research News.

Contacts

Tameka Bailey, assistant professor of biological sciences
Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences
479-575-6821, tabaile@uark.edu

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