In a chemistry lab at Oregon State University, high school students recently created tiny particles invisible to the naked eye. Clad in lab coats, these young students were also a part of something bigger — the vision of an associate professor aiming to make STEM fields accessible to all.
For five days, the students participated in the Ignite inSTEM summer camp, a groundbreaking initiative to diversify the biomedical workforce by engaging underrepresented youth in hands-on science for the first time and improving their retention in STEM.
Thanks to funds provided by her National Science Foundation CAREER award, chemist Marilyn Rampersad Mackiewicz launched the camp in 2022, partnering with STEM Academy Director Catherine Law. The camp aims to recruit local first-generation and low-income students from Black and Hispanic communities, giving them the opportunity to solve a challenge in human health.
This year’s camp included 10 Latinx high schoolers who had never taken a science class before.
“The fact that the room was full of students that have gone through similar experiences made me less nervous to participate because I felt comfortable in the group. For the first time, I was in a science lab full of diversity,” a student said.