16 July 2012
GE Girls at MSOE Helps Make Science Real… and Fun
WAUKESHA, WI - JULY 16, 2012 - Starting today, 25 middle
school girls from the Waukesha School District will spend
an energetic week exploring the fun of hands-on science,
technology, engineering and math (STEM), and initiating
mentoring relationships with women in STEM careers. The
week-long learning program, GE Girls at MSOE, is sponsored
by GE Healthcare Women's Network in collaboration with
Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE) and the Waukesha
STEM Academy.
"Studies show that while a majority of today's girls have a
clear interest in STEM, they don't prioritize STEM fields
when thinking about future careers. Furthermore, girls
express that they don't know a lot about STEM careers and
opportunities," says Dee Mellor, GE Healthcare's Vice
President and Chief Quality Officer, and executive champion
of the GE Women's Network, an employee group that provides
leadership development, advancement and career broadening
opportunities. "With help from our partners, the GE Women's
Network is working to foster lasting interest in STEM among
girls in our community and share our enthusiasm for these
fields."
This is the first time this program is taking place in
Milwaukee. This summer, GE is also conducting GE Girls at
MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) in
Massachusetts for the second consecutive year and GE Girls
at Rensselaer (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) in New
York for the first time.
In Milwaukee, students will be bused daily to MSOE where
they will gain instruction from two Waukesha STEM Academy
teachers and MSOE faculty. Daily lessons will focus on
construction, programming, electronics, healthcare and
chemistry. The exclusive GE Healthcare curriculum includes
activities featuring medical technologies, physiology and
biomedical engineering. Girls will have the opportunity to
experiment with X-ray physics, operate ultrasound
technology, and measure metabolic function with real
medical devices. Before the week is over, each program
participant will also meet an accomplished female mentor
from the GE Women's Network, primarily with engineering or
technology backgrounds.
"Getting more girls on board with STEM requires deliberate
strategies on the part of educators to connect learning
with real-life experiences," said Principal Ryan Krohn,
Waukesha STEM Academy. "Teaming with GE Healthcare and MSOE
creates a wonderful opportunity to show our participating
students how classroom math and science can translate into
higher education and rewarding careers."
Interested sixth- and seventh-graders applied this spring,
and participants were selected by Waukesha Public School
faculty. GE worked with MSOE to develop curriculum and
exercises.
"The GE Girls at MSOE program enables us to reach girls
during their middle school years, before many of them start
losing interest in math and science," said Olga Imas,
assistant professor of biomedical engineering at MSOE. "It
would be incredibly satisfying to see any of these girls
again as MSOE students someday."
GE Healthcare has a long history of supporting education in
the Milwaukee area through a host of GE Volunteer efforts,
the GE Foundation grant to Milwaukee Public Schools, and an
annual Community Service Day. GE Girls at MSOE is another
way GE Healthcare is investing in the greater Milwaukee
community.
About GE Healthcare
GE Healthcare provides transformational medical
technologies and services that are shaping a new age of
patient care. Our broad expertise in medical imaging and
information technologies, medical diagnostics, patient
monitoring systems, drug discovery, biopharmaceutical
manufacturing technologies, performance improvement and
performance solutions services help our customers to
deliver better care to more people around the world at a
lower cost. In addition, we partner with healthcare
leaders, striving to leverage the global policy change
necessary to implement a successful shift to sustainable
healthcare systems.
Our "healthymagination" vision for the future invites the
world to join us on our journey as we continuously develop
innovations focused on reducing costs, increasing access
and improving quality and efficiency around the world.
Headquartered in the United Kingdom, GE Healthcare is a
unit of General Electric Company (NYSE: GE). Worldwide, GE
Healthcare employs more than 46,000 people committed to
serving healthcare professionals and their patients in more
than 100 countries. For more information about GE
Healthcare, visit our website at www.gehealthcare.com.
For our latest news, please visit http://newsroom.gehealthcare.com.
About MSOE
MSOE is an independent, non-profit university with about
2,500 students. MSOE offers 18 bachelor's degrees and nine
master's degrees in the engineering, engineering
technology, building and infrastructure engineering,
health-related engineering, computer, business and nursing
fields. The university has a national academic reputation;
longstanding ties to business and industry; dedicated
professors with real-world experience; and extremely high
placement rates and the highest starting salaries of any
Wisconsin university according to PayScale Inc. MSOE
graduates are well-rounded, technologically experienced and
highly productive professionals and leaders.