Girlstart After School
Impact
SEDL, a prestigious education research nonprofit, named Girlstart After School as one of very few U.S. STEM education programs for girls that runs for a full year, is based in research on what works, and lines up with academic standards for what all students should know and be able to do in math and science. Recent research suggests that Girlstart boosts girls’ performance on standard tests and inspires them to take more challenging math and science courses in high school.
Contact
Accomplished
- Need Accomplished
- Evaluation Developing
- Sustainability Accomplished
- Replication & Scalability Accomplished
- Partnerships Accomplished
- Capacity Accomplished
- Challenging & Relevant Content Accomplished
- STEM Practices Accomplished
- Inspiration Accomplished
- Under-Represented Groups Developing
As Girlstart celebrates its 25th year, I cannot express what an incredible honor it is for me to serve as the Executive Director. I look forward to building upon the great foundation that has been laid so that we can inspire more youth who never knew STEM was for them.
Executive Director
Design Principles
The programs in this database clear a high bar. STEMworks reviewed each program against the Design Principles for Effective STEM Philanthropy. Programs must be Accomplished () across all Design Principles, or be Developing () in a maximum of three areas.
Overarching Principles
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Need Accomplished
Identify and target a compelling and well-defined need.
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Evaluation Developing
Use rigorous evaluation to continuously measure and inform progress towards the compelling need identified.
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Sustainability Accomplished
Ensure work is sustainable.
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Replication & Scalability Accomplished
Demonstrate replicability and scalability.
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Partnerships Accomplished
Create high impact partnerships.
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Capacity Accomplished
Ensure organizational capacity to achieve goals.
STEM Principles
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Challenging & Relevant Content Accomplished
Offer challenging and relevant STEM content for the target audience.
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STEM Practices Accomplished
Incorporate and encourage STEM practices.
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Inspiration Accomplished
Inspire interest and engagement in STEM.
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Under-Represented Groups Developing
Identify and address the needs of under-represented groups.
Program Overview
Girlstart After School is an intervention program that provides schools free, weekly after-school STEM programming for girls in the grades 3 through 8, as well as wraparound support for participating parents and teachers. Based in Austin, Texas, Girlstart After School creates hands-on and inquiry-based activities across the STEM disciplines. At each partner school, Girlstart After School forms a club of 20+ girls who meet weekly throughout the school year for an hour of hands-on, informal STEM programming aligned with state and national standards. Girlstart After School intends to increase girls’ mastery in STEM subjects by introducing them to real-world applications as well as activities that build participants’ skills. To help support students’ mastery and engagement in STEM during the school day, Girlstart offers professional development sessions for participating schools and teachers, and it further assists schools to accomplish their goals for STEM learning school-wide through programmatic and strategic support. Girlstart uses monthly parent-association meetings (in both English and Spanish) and math/science nights to help parents support their daughters’ interest and achievement in STEM subjects. Girlstart hosts community-oriented Science Extravaganzas and showcases of student work (prepared by participants) at the end of each semester. All Girlstart After School participants receive free registration and transportation to the organization’s Girls in STEM conference, hosted at the University of Texas-Austin.
Funders and Partners
Girlstart is grateful for gracious and dedicated donors that have made Girlstart After School expansion and replication possible. They include: Dell; Education Foundation of America; Google; the KDK-Harman Foundation; the Michael and Susan Dell Foundation; Motorola Solutions Foundation; and NASA’s CP4SMP+ initiative. In addition, Girlstart After School has donors among the CTEq member corporations, including Battelle; Connect a Million Minds (An Initiative of Time Warner Cable); IBM; and JPMorgan Chase.