For the first time in history, girls win all the top 5 prizes of the national STEM competition.

Jack Cooley

01/14/2021
Andželika / Community member /https://www.boredpanda.com/ The finalists were judged for their knowledge of STEM subjects and demonstration of 21st-century skills, such as critical thinking, communication, creativity, collaborative skills, and teamwork. This year, something truly amazing happened in the Broadcom MASTERS National STEM Competition. Both the participants and organizers were excited to witness a historic moment. […]

Andželika / Community member /https://www.boredpanda.com/

The finalists were judged for their knowledge of STEM subjects and demonstration of 21st-century skills, such as critical thinking, communication, creativity, collaborative skills, and teamwork.

This year, something truly amazing happened in the Broadcom MASTERS National STEM Competition. Both the participants and organizers were excited to witness a historic moment. For the first time since the competition was launched in 2010, all top 5 prizes were awarded to girls. It’s not the only new milestone in the event, which took place last month.

17 5de124ab08533 700 1

Apparently, for the first time, out of 2,348 middle schoolers, more girls than boys were chosen to try out their strengths in the competition.

The finalists were judged for their knowledge of STEM subjects and demonstration of 21st-century skills, such as critical thinking, communication, creativity, collaborative skills, and teamwork. Here are the top 5 finalists:

13 5de1288b7396b 700 1

Gassler, the 14-year-old from West Grove, Pennsylvania won the $25,000 Samueli Foundation Prize for finding a way to reduce blind spots in cars

14 5de1288d1185b 700 1

Alaina was inspired to solve this issue by her mother who doesn’t like driving her vehicle because of its large A-pillar design. “I started to think about how blind spots are a huge problem in all cars,” Alaina says, so she went out and solved it and won a prize for it. For more about how she did it, you can read our previous article

Sidor Clare

1 5de124dbee5ea 700 1
7 5de124e3bf72a 700 1

Clare the 14-year-old from Sandy, Utah, won the $10,000 Marconi/Samueli Award for Innovation 

3 5de124df19142 700 1
She invented bricks that could be made on Mars so that space explorers wouldn’t have to bring their own building materials to the planet.

Rachel Bergey

Contenido Relacionado