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An ethics-based approach to fostering STEM Identity: A look into the Loyola University Chicago Dana Program for Neuroscience and Society

Bernadette Weigman

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If you are reading this article, chances are you are interested in neuroscience in some way, shape or form. You might even see yourself as a neuroscientist one day, are studying to become one, or are currently researching the brain in a lab or treating it in a hospital. If this is true, then Dr. Bill Rochlin, Professor of developmental neurobiology at Loyola University Chicago, would say that you have successfully tapped into your โ€œSTEM Identity.โ€

You see yourself as a valuable contributor to science, technology, engineering and math. However, not everyone, including many young children in our schools today, is fortunate enough to confidently say this about themselves. In an effort to change this, Dr. Bill Rochlin and his colleagues at Loyola University Chicago launched their new Program for Neuroscience and Society this past spring.

The program is funded by the Dana Center Initiative of the Dana Foundation, a philanthropic organization that supports research in neuroscience and society, education, training, and public engagement on neuroscience and society issues. You can read more about the Dana Center Initiative here.

The program at Loyola is led by Dr. William Rochlin, Dr. Elizabeth Wakefield, Dr. Demetri Morgan, Dr. Bastiaan Vanacker, and Dr. Joseph Vukov, who have chosen to focus their efforts in neuroscience and society on the younger generation of Chicago. The Civic Science Times discussed these efforts with Dr. Rochlin, Associate Professor in the Biology Department and Director of Molecular/Cellular Neuroscience, and Dr. Wakefield, Associate Professor in the Psychology Department.ย 

Illustration by Bernadette Weigman

Loyola has partnered with schools that serve underprivileged communities, including those that havenโ€™t had great exposure to academic neuroscience. Dr Rochlin explains that they want the students participating in the program to develop a STEM identity: โ€œconfidence in their STEM learning and skills and interest in pursuing a STEM career, through gaining comfort in working with STEM mentors and an understanding of the relation between STEM work and societal impact.โ€

Dr Rochlin, Dr. Wakefield and their colleagues facilitate this by grounding neuroscience topics in neuroethics. Dr. Rochlin explained that by integrating neuroscience learning with ethical discussions, the program allows young people, even those with little knowledge of the science, to have a stake in neuroscience. 

The program consists of three phases: the first is an after-school program where neuroscience topics are introduced to high school students in the context of ethical considerations, during the second phase the students are invited to conduct research projects in neuroscience labs at the university over the summer to experience hands-on lab work as well as professional development advice, the third phase concludes the program with a Neuroscience and Society Day in which middle school students are invited to Loyolaโ€™s campus to participate in discussions on neuroscience and its ethical implications led and organized by the high school students who participated in phases 1 and 2.

The three phases were carefully crafted to enable students to fully immerse themselves in neuroscience and start to identify as scientists. Because students approach neuroscience through the lens of ethics, they engage deeply with what they learn. Through lab research, students can get hands-on experience in neuroscience labs. And through the Neuroscience and Society Day, high school students become leaders in their neuroscience topic of choice applying all that they have learned through the program.

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Dr. Wakefield clarified: โ€œThe hope is that this near-peer mentoring approach will empower the high school students, many of whom hold identities traditionally minoritized in STEM fields, to persist in neuroscience.  At the same time, the high school students will serve as role models for the middle school students, inspiring the younger studentsโ€™ interest in neuroscience and awareness of the connections between neuroscience and societal issues with the eventual goal of broadening representation in the field.โ€

A second piece of the program involves university students by hosting a series of neuroscience competitions for undergraduate and graduate trainees. While these competitions are neuroscience focused, they involve other disciplines, in hopes that people start recognizing the interdisciplinary role neuroscience plays in society. The competition topics include neuro-art, neuroethics, neuro-journalism, and neuromarketing. They also will host a micro-grant competition, which is open to any non-profit organization in the Chicago area seeking to elevate neuroscience appreciation in their community or appreciation of community needs among neuroscience researchers.

While the Loyola Dana Program is just getting started, its leaders at Loyola U Chicago, as well as individuals from the Dana Foundation, find it critical to evaluate the impact of the program every step of the way. During our conversation, Dr. Wakefield explained that she, along with Dr. Morgan, are evaluating the impact of the program on the high school students. They have created a qualitative and quantitative pre-post interview protocol for the program.

The interview and surveys evaluate students’ STEM identity, before and after being in the program, as well as how much knowledge the students feel they have gained in neuroethics. Additionally, the program at Loyola will develop a website to disseminate their materials and findings. The program wants to see young people from all walks of life start to see themselves as scientists, those within Chicago and beyond Chicago. The team at Loyola hopes the website can become a resource for other universities and organizations, enabling those that are interested to engage high school and middle school students in their communities.

The Dana Center Initiative is founded upon the Dana Foundationโ€™s three programmatic pillars, Dana Frontiers, Dana NextGen, and Dana Education, which you can read more about here. The Loyola Dana Program seamlessly fits with the Dana Education pillar because it focuses its efforts on including young people in the exploration of neuroscience, especially those without previous exposure.

Not only is the program teaching young people about neuroscience, but it is showing them a way in which they fit into the landscape of neuroscience research and practice. We are excited to follow Loyolaโ€™s program as it continues to engage students and publishes its findings. 

Civic Science Times

The 2024 ASTC conference starts on Sept 27: Hereโ€™s what to expect

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Starting on September 27, 2024, the Association of Science and Technology Centers (ASTC) will host its annual conference in Chicago that will gather science-engagement professionals to discuss the latest trends in public engagement. The conference program utilizes session tracks and engagement tags to assist attendees in navigating the diversity of engagement opportunities provided by the conference. Session tracks include trends and innovation, leadership and direction, community and partnerships, and several more.

The ASTC mentions that “this yearโ€™s sessions span timely topics like AI, inclusion and accessibility, and planetary health, as well as core science engagement issues and practice.” They further state that this yearโ€™s week long conference will โ€œhighlight the diverse array of ASTC members in the Chicago area,โ€ including local institutions such as the Field Museum, Adler Planetarium, and Griffin Museum of Science and Industry. Attendees will have the chance to explore these organizations through sessions, site visits, and collaborative events.

One of the conference’s special features is the preconference intensives, which offer in-depth workshops such as Make_X: Engaging the Creativity of the Individual, Exploring and Planning for Digital Immersive Exhibits at Your Museum, and Evaluation and Educator Leadership in Museum Makerspaces. These highly interactive sessions provide focused learning and networking opportunities before the main conference.

Engagement tags categorize sessions by their format and level of participation. For example, experiential sessions involve hands-on activities, while group discussions encourage active audience participation. Hands-on showcases offer short, interactive demonstrations, and lightning sessions group quick presentations on specific topics. Other formats include panels, poster presentations, and solution labs, ensuring that attendees can engage in ways that suit their learning preferences. These tags provide an additional layer of navigation for those attending the conference which is jam packed with events.

For example, there will be a total of 8 lightning sessions across diverse topics such as Teens and Youth Engagement with talk titles such as Beyond Workforce Development: Using STEM to Foster Youth Leadership and Advance Social Justice, Youth Volunteers: Engagement Beyond the Galleries, and Using Unique Field Experiences to Introduce Diverse Audiences to STEM Fields.

There will be a total of 55 posters with titles such as Building Insights Through Observation: An Arts-Based Model for Building STEM Data Literacy, From Deep Space to the Deep Sea: Incorporating Current Research into Education and Exhibit Programs, and Leveraging Community Expertise to Advance Sustainability Goals.

A total of 32 panels will take place with titles such as Leading with the Arts: Centering Arts-Based Methods for Deeper Science Learning and Navigating Methods for Integrating Community Knowledge and Values into Museum Practice.

A total of 18 experientials, 8 solution labs, 9 hands-on showcases, 16 preconference intensives, and 24 group discussions. The conference will clearly offer something for everyone, and energy and excitement are pretty much guaranteed.

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The Big Picture

The ASTC conference is part of a broader community of dedicated public engagement conferences that aim to strengthen connections between science engagement scholars, practitioners, and other stakeholders. Other conferences include SciTalk by the Association of Science Communicators, Public Communicaton for Science and Technology, National Science Policy Network, and ComSciCon, which share missions that overlap around fostering learning, networking, and collaboration across their respective areas within the broader civic science landscape.

However, these conferences face many challenges, most notably around funding to host them and ensure that they remain accessible to all. Tracking the impact over the long term is also a challenge. For attendees, navigating and prioritizing conferences on the growing list of conferences is also a challenge. Ultimately, how the ecosystem of public engagement conferences continues to evolve will be important for scholars to keep tracking and studying.

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