Las Vegas Review-Journal

CCSD gets assurance of STEM resources

Materials to be given for middle school use

- By Nicole Raz Las Vegas Review-journal

For the third time in two years, a nonprofit has announced its partnershi­p with the Clark County School District.

STEM Academy, a national nonprofit dedicated to improving science, technology, engineerin­g, and math, or STEM, education to meet future workforce needs, first announced its donation of STEM resources to the school district in March 2016.

Clark County School District Superinten­dent Pat Skorkowsky said at the time that “this gift will move Nevada middle schools toward the new Nevada.”

But nothing materializ­ed in Nevada schools.

STEM Academy, also known as STEM 101, announced its donation again in February, but still nothing happened.

As the Review-journal previously reported, personnel moves at the school district amid the preparatio­n for the rollout of the reorganiza­tion largely delayed any action.

Russell Mickelson, CEO of STEM Academy Inc., met with the school district Friday and told the Review-journal on Monday that he’s confident STEM Academy resources will be put to good use.

“CCSD leadership will seek approval of STEM 101 curriculum for use within the district at the next board meeting,” Mickelson said in an email.

Jesse Welsh, the school district’s assistant superinten­dent of the instructio­nal design and profession­al learning division, said the district will write a memorandum of understand­ing and get the STEM Academy tools into schools as soon as it can.

Mickelson met with Welsh on Friday after three previous meetings with the school district, one with Skorkowsky and two with interim figures.

STEM Academy offers online teacher resources and student learning activities. The STEM Academy platform guides teachers and students through hands-on activities, such as learning about design and math to build an electric guitar or launch aerodynami­c straw rockets.

Nevada is also the second state, after Utah, in which STEM Academy is introducin­g something called Corporate Connection­s.

Mickelson and his team have

STEM

spent nearly a year — and counting — working with 11 local employers to create videos with correspond­ing projects for middle school students.

Companies, including Tesla and Bank of Nevada, worked with STEM Academy to create virtual tours of their sites, which include interviews with people at different levels in the company who talk about what they do and what type of skills and education their roles require.

The videos come with a five-day company project for students to complete.

In 2016, Mickelson announced that the nonprofit had given Nevada

middle schools free access to STEM Academy’s online STEM curriculum, its corporate connection­s program, profession­al developmen­t and its consulting services. Nevada is the first state to which the nonprofit donated its entire platform for free, originally for a three-year term.

As soon as the partnershi­p between

STEM Academy and the school district is formalized, Welsh said, the district will work with individual schools to alert them of the new resources and their use.

“We’ll make it available to all (middle) schools,” Welsh said. “Because it’s a supplement, it will really be up to those teachers whether they want to use it,”

He hopes to see the corporate connection­s supplement in middle schools by November, he said.

“It will really help our students to see what some of the careers are out there in Nevada and get them excited about those opportunit­ies.”

Contact Nicole Raz at nraz@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4512. Follow @Journalist­nikki on Twitter.

 ??  ?? Russell Mickelson
Russell Mickelson

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