Breaking the STEM Stereotype: Reaching Girls in Early Childhood

Author:   Amanda Alzena Sullivan
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN:  

9781475842043


Pages:   186
Publication Date:   23 September 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Breaking the STEM Stereotype: Reaching Girls in Early Childhood


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Full Product Details

Author:   Amanda Alzena Sullivan
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield
Dimensions:   Width: 15.90cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.90cm
Weight:   0.463kg
ISBN:  

9781475842043


ISBN 10:   147584204
Pages:   186
Publication Date:   23 September 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Wondering why girls are underrepresented in STEM and how to change this pattern? Breaking the STEM Stereotype is a great place to start! In accessible language, Dr. Sullivan describes some of the roots of the problem before suggesting powerful and practical strategies that parents, teachers, and caregivers can use with young children to create more welcoming environments that empower girls to engage more fully in STEM. Such awareness and ideas will help us all inspire and support the next generation of girls who will discover, shape, and understand our world through STEM. -- Christine M. Cunningham, Founding Director of Engineering is Elementary, Author of Engineering in Elementary STEM Education (Teachers College Press) Amanda Sullivan has written a must-read book for getting girls involved in STEM at an early age. If you are looking for strategies on how to get young ladies to crash the digital divide that currently exist in the STEM world then this is your book. Introducing girls at an early age is the foundation we all must build if want to get the next generation (especially girls) equipped for the careers in STEM and computer science fields. -- Kimberly Lane Clark, Ed.S., Director of Blended Learning-Lancaster ISD, Ask A Techno Girl @askatechnogirl As someone who has struggled to hire technically skilled professionals that reflect the demographics of the country, I am very encouraged that Breaking the STEM Stereotype offers a researched-based understanding of why it is so hard to find qualified women for these roles. Even more important, Dr. Sullivan shows clearly why solutions to this problem must include engagement of girls at much younger ages than had previously been believed by many parents and educators. As important as these solutions are for the girls themselves, the recommendations in Breaking the STEM Stereotype may be even more important for employers who so clearly need more women's perspectives in order to develop, market, and regulate better, more broadly useful products. Even more than girls need to understand STEM thinking, the STEM world needs their future contributions and perspectives. -- Mitch Rosenberg, co-founder and CEO of KinderLab Robotics, www.kinderlabrobotics.com


Wondering why girls are underrepresented in STEM and how to change this pattern? Breaking the STEM Stereotype is a great place to start! In accessible language, Dr. Sullivan describes some of the roots of the problem before suggesting powerful and practical strategies that parents, teachers, and caregivers can use with young children to create more welcoming environments that empower girls to engage more fully in STEM. Such awareness and ideas will help us all inspire and support the next generation of girls who will discover, shape, and understand our world through STEM. -- Christine M. Cunningham, Founding Director of Engineering is Elementary, Author of Engineering in Elementary STEM Education (Teachers College Press) Amanda Sullivan has written a must-read book for getting girls involved in STEM at an early age. If you are looking for strategies on how to get young ladies to crash the digital divide that currently exist in the STEM world then this is your book. Introducing girls at an early age is the foundation we all must build if want to get the next generation (especially girls) equipped for the careers in STEM and computer science fields. -- Kimberly Lane Clark, Ed.S., Director of Blended Learning-Lancaster ISD, Ask A Techno Girl @askatechnogirl As someone who has struggled to hire technically skilled professionals that reflect the demographics of the country, I am very encouraged that Breaking the STEM Stereotype offers a researched-based understanding of why it is so hard to find qualified women for these roles. Even more important, Dr. Sullivan shows clearly why solutions to this problem must include engagement of girls at much younger ages than had previously been believed by many parents and educators. As important as these solutions are for the girls themselves, the recommendations in Breaking the STEM Stereotype may be even more important for employers who so clearly need more women's perspectives in order to develop, market, and regulate better, more broadly useful products. Even more than girls need to understand STEM thinking, the STEM world needs their future contributions and perspectives. -- Mitch Rosenberg, co-founder and CEO of KinderLab Robotics, www.kinderlabrobotics.com Passionate about encouraging creativity, ingenuity, and perseverance in young children? You must read Dr. Amanda Sullivan's book, Breaking the STEM Stereotype to learn about the ways our world discourages girls from pursuing endeavors in STEM field from the earliest of ages. Not only does she provide data and research from multiple domains to show this issue persists, she effectively explains that this is a problem for businesses and the overall success of our human race. But, she doesn't stop with just the facts. She is a true solution finder, offering various job aides both teachers and parents can use immediately to turn attitudes around and help our girls believe they can have a career in any field they wish. As a devoted advocate of the developmentally appropriate use of education technology and most importantly, a mother of a five-year-old daughter, I just wish this book had come out sooner! -- Jennifer Bowden, M.Ed, President, Early Learning Network, International Society of Technology in Education, 2017-2019


Author Information

Dr. Amanda Alzena Sullivan, Ph.D. is a child development specialist who researches the impact of new technologies and media on children. Amanda’s research is specifically concerned with using new technologies to engage girls in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) in order to increase the representation of girls and women in these fields.

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