10-year-old Aleena Baloch shares how the nonprofit Science Fuse is helping girls like her receive quality science education.
The 14-year-old Pakistani student explains how she broke the world record time for reciting the periodic table.
Zuzana Hudáčová shares what it was like to fight the pandemic from her lab.
Liseli gençler akıllı hayvan barınağı inşa edecekler.
For years I’ve been working to make it easier for the next generation of Black students in Chicago to study STEM — but I can’t solve this problem alone.
“We need women to create things that fit our needs as a society and without their contributions, many of our needs might be ignored or misrepresented,” shares the Emirati student.
Bats are critical pillars of our ecosystem. This biologist is making sure they’ll be around for years to come.
Historically, aviation and aerospace have been a “boys club.” Refilwe Ledwaba founded Girls Fly Programme in Africa to change that.
“We sought to create a fun game but one that also showed that Afghan girls are capable of solving challenges and doing great things.”
I’m Aleena! I am an Indian living in UAE, a huge “Ironman” fan and a teenager who is anxious about us polluting the Earth.
How the Ethiopian Space Science Society is getting students involved in the country’s celestial research.
Naceem writes about studying to become a doctor and how gender discrimination limits girls in her community.
تكتب لنا نسيم عن تجربتها في دراسة الطب و كيف أن عدم المساواة بين الجنسين يحدّ من قدرات الفتيات في مجتمعها
My app, Proto, helps connect educators, students and facilities with underutilized 3D printers so more people can learn how to use them.
“We didn’t want the story of robotics to finish with our team. We wanted other girls to be here, to work in this field,” says 16-year-old Fatemah, Afghan Dreamers’ captain.
የቤተልሄም 9ኛ ዓመት የልደት በዓል ላይ አባቷ ስራ ስለነበረባቸው ልደቷን ሊያከብሩላት ስላልቻሉ ነበር የቴክኖሎጂ ንግድ ስራ ፈጣሪ በመሆን የልደቷን ወጪ በራሷ ለመሸፈን የወሰነችው።
Watch teen robotics expert Kanon Nakajima prepare to win her next championship.
How the “refugee STEMinist” discovered her love of aerospace engineering.
Camila Codina, estudiante argentina de 17 años y mentora en clases de programación, comparte qué es lo que necesitas saber para entrar en el campo.