Miami Herald (Sunday)

Miami nonprofit provides fun (and free) STEM programs for kids in underserve­d communitie­s

- BY NANCY DAHLBERG

Making bath bombs, coding an AI-powered robot, learning how mechanical energy powers a skateboard, joining a Lego League, creating virtual stories in an augmented reality world, making custom cosmetics, even designing and building a model F1 race car — this is a fun, hands-on education for kids provided by a Miami organizati­on.

S.E.E.K Foundation, which stands for “Seeking Education Empowers Knowledge,” is focused on STEAM education — that’s science, technology, engineerin­g, art and math. S.E.E.K brings this educationa­l programmin­g to South Florida’s underserve­d neighborho­ods primarily through afterschoo­l programs, Saturday events and summer camps that are free.

Anike Sakariyawo, S.E.E.K’s founder and CEO, said her experience­s as a child attending Title 1 schools and in her 15-year career as a Miami-Dade public school science teacher in underserve­d communitie­s inspired her to start her nonprofit a decade ago.

“I saw the disparity gap in access to quality STEM education and I felt the need to help close the gap,” she said. “I strongly believe education can take you wherever you want to go in the world.”

With early backing from Wade’s World Foundation and Best Buy, S.E.E.K’s after-school STEM programs started out by offering robotics — and that’s still a popular program today. But S.E.E.K has now broadened the STEM education it offers, with groupings of programs for youth ranging from age 5 to 18.

In addition to learning how to build robots, the children might learn about physical and chemical changes by making a lip balm or learn about viscosity by making a lotion.

They might learn to build a mobile AC unit, which would come in handy for hurricane season, or build a miniature drone.

“We created a program that not only exposes kids to skills such as coding technology, Sakariyawo said. “We also wanted to expose kids to general science with the understand­ing that not every child wants to build a robot.”

So far, S.E.E.K has worked with nearly 12,000 kids. While the nonprofit has been focused on South Florida, S.E.E.K runs programs in Atlanta, and other cities are in the pipeline.

S.E.E.K’s local programs are held in Miami Gardens, Miami’s Overtown neighborho­od, Homestead and parts of Broward. But next year some of the programs may get a new home. S.E.E.K is renovating and expanding a building in Opa-locka to become the nonprofit’s STEAM Makerspace, where kids and their parents can access tech resources they don’t have at home to create whatever they can imagine. Sakariyawo hopes to open the center by the end of 2023.

The STEAM Makerspace will have rooms where kids can utilize technology to build robots, drones and cars, for instance. Another section will be strictly for 3D printing, and there will be areas for learning about chemistry where the kids can do things like make their own cosmetic lines. A large green-screen room will allow kids to experience augmented reality, create animation, or make a movie.

With Formula 1 racing now part of the Miami scene, S.E.E.K partnered with the City of Miami Gardens to offer the company’s F1 in Schools program. F1 in Schools, one of the largest STEM programs in the world, teaches kids how to design and build model cars using specific measuremen­ts, CAD (Computer Aided Design) software and 3D printers, Sakariyawo explained.

They also go through the real-world process of coming up with a team, designing and building a model race car, creating a company and a budget, marketing and raising sponsorshi­ps. And then, yes, they get to race, learning about physics and aerodynami­cs and using math skills to calculate their speed.

For students who just want a taste of STEAM, S.E.E.K puts on STEAMtasti­c Saturdays, which are topic-oriented and feature projects for kids of all ages and parents are encouraged to join in. A recent Saturday program in Miami Gardens featured augmented reality. For kids wanting more, the STEAMtasti­c summer camps are popular, and S.E.E.K runs a variety of regular afterschoo­l programs for different age groups, too.

With backing from Florida Internatio­nal University, Blackstone, the

City of Miami Gardens, the Miami Foundation and other entities, S.E.E.K’s team of about 15 full-time and part-time employees is always developing new programs.

It’s that program innovation that drew Tanya Fenton to apply to S.E.E.K as an instructor. The former elementary and middlescho­ol teacher said she was frustrated in the classroom because she felt like she had to force-feed lessons to the kids. Not so with S.E.E.K.

“They’re eager, they’re ready, they want to learn more. They’re critical thinkers, they want to build, they want to use their hands. They are just so much more active in their learning than I’ve ever seen before,” said Fenton, who is now S.E.E.K’s program manager. “This opportunit­y revived my love for education.”

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? Anike Sakariyawo, CEO and founder of the S.E.E.K Foundation, works with Kinsley (left) and Keymaree Michaud, during a STEAMtasti­c Saturday in Miami Gardens, where kids learn about science, tech, math, engineerin­g and art.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com Anike Sakariyawo, CEO and founder of the S.E.E.K Foundation, works with Kinsley (left) and Keymaree Michaud, during a STEAMtasti­c Saturday in Miami Gardens, where kids learn about science, tech, math, engineerin­g and art.

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