UC Berkeley Camps Show Middle School Girls Ins and Outs of Engineering
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
 - 08/02/16
 
		
        Middle school girls received a major dose of real-life  engineering exposure during four week-long camps held this summer at  the University of California, Berkeley.  For the third year the school hosted "Girls in Engineering,"  which brings 30 students in grades 5-7 together for one week to build  prosthetic arms and robots, develop communication and team skills, go on field  trips to local companies such as Twitter and Pixar and meet with female  researchers and students who demonstrate the technology they're developing.
This non-residential camp is intended, the university  explains on its website, to help close the "gender gap" in STEM  fields. Taught by Berkeley female faculty, staff and students, the program  promotes leadership skills and encourages campers to pursue further education  and careers in engineering and related fields.
For its part, Berkeley's undergraduate program in  engineering has a female population of about 24 percent, above the national  average of 19 percent, as reported by the American  Society of Engineering Education.
During the latest camp, one area of emphasis was learning  how 3D printing and open-source file sharing can be used to create custom hand  prosthetics for children who need them. The girls watched a video about Sophie's  super hand, a project begun in the University  of California Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of  Society (CITRIS), one branch of which is housed at Berkeley.
"The big thing with kids' prosthetics is that they  outgrow them quickly and need new ones. Another thing is that these prosthetics  are customizable," said mechanical engineering doctoral student Aimee  Goncalves to the girls. Goncalves led participants through assembly of prosthetic  hands "fresh off the printers," as an  article about the program reported.
The five hands built by the girls ended up being shipped to  a project called the Prosthetic Kids  Hand Challenge, which matches makers of prosthetics with kids who need  them.
Added Girls in Engineering program director Lizzie Hager-Barnard,  "We hope to see some of these girls back here on campus in another five  years or so."
Although the 2016 camps have ended, the university is  accepting applications online for both San Francisco area middle school campers and high  school volunteers for its 2017 camps.
The program is supported by funding from the National Science Foundation, the Peggy and Jack Baskin Foundation, flash  memory firm SanDisk and anime company Crunchyroll.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.