The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Robots, race cars and weather ...

Girl Scouts offer new badges

- By Leanne Italie The Associated Press

NEW YORK » Girl Scouts from tiny Daisies to teen Ambassador­s may earn 23 new badges focused on science, technology, engineerin­g and math.

It’s the largest addition of new badges in a decade for Girl Scouts of the USA. The effort takes a progressiv­e approach to STEM and also nudges girls to become citizen scientists using the great outdoors as their laboratory.

Among the new badges are those that introduce kindergart­en and first graders to the world of robots and engineerin­g. Scouts can learn basic programmin­g and build prototypes to solve everyday problems. Older scouts will have the chance to enhance those skills, learning more about artificial intelligen­ce, algorithms and how to formally present their work.

Other new badges focus on race car and aviation design using kits from GoldieBlox, a girl-focused toy company. The “leave no trace” approach to interactin­g with the environmen­t and the study of meteorolog­y by learning to predict weather patterns and potential hazards are among activities geared to new outdoors badges.

Cayla Hicks, 7, is grateful. She’s a Baltimore Brownie who’s interested in the “Designing Robots” badge.

“I want to be a scientist. I like building things and I like discoverin­g things. Me and my brother — well, I usually ask my brother if

he wants to look through my telescope. Usually he says no,” Cayla said as she recently demonstrat­ed how to make a “robotic arm” out of sticks and fasteners.

Baby boomer Sylvia Acevedo,

the CEO of the scouting group, was just like Cayla as a girl growing up in tiny Las Cruces, New Mexico.

“My troop leader looked at me and saw me looking at the stars, and she taught me that there were constellat­ions, she taught me there were systems and patterns to the stars,” Acevedo said in a recent interview. “Because I got my science badge I developed that courage and that confidence to study science and math at a time when girls like me weren’t studying science and math. Girls like me, statistica­lly, weren’t even finishing high school.”

Acevedo was one of the first Hispanic students, male or female, to earn a graduate engineerin­g degree from Stanford University. The former tech executive’s first job was as a rocket scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

The new badges , some of which were requested by scouts themselves in a survey, are available starting this week.

Next year, another initiative will allow Girl Scouts to earn “Cybersecur­ity” badges. One study cited by the scouts showed women remain vastly underrepre­sented in that industry, holding 11 percent of such jobs globally. Another study, done by the Computing Technology Industry Associatio­n, found that 69 percent of women who have not pursued careers in informatio­n technology attribute their choice to not knowing what opportunit­ies are available to them.

As for STEM overall, Acevedo said, a lot of girls remain vulnerable to a crisis of confidence in pursuing education and careers in those fields.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, a Girl Scout badge for learning how to program a robot is seen beneath a sample of new badges focused on science, technology, engineerin­g and math in Owings Mills, Md.
PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, a Girl Scout badge for learning how to program a robot is seen beneath a sample of new badges focused on science, technology, engineerin­g and math in Owings Mills, Md.

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