For Dorothy Najeebah Mateen, a capstone project designing sustainable energy systems for a new housing development was a chance to be creative with the technical skills she acquired at Lansing Community College.
Mateen described the solar hot water system she designed with electric and gas backup during the October 24 showcase session at the 2013 Advanced Technological Education Principal Investigators Conference. The showcase sessions at the annual ATE-PI meeting in Washington, D.C., are always lively as the educators who lead ATE initiatives and their students enthusiastically explain the innovative projects they have developed with ATE grants from the National Science Foundation.
At the conference opening plenary, Celeste Carter extended as special welcome to the 60 student presenters and reminded the 800 other conference attendees—educators, employers, federal officials, and nonprofit organization representatives—that students are "the reason the ATE program is around." Carter is the lead program director of ATE in the National Science Foundation's Division of Undergraduate Education.
In 2012 alone, 96,460 students at 2,240 institutions were directly affected by the grants that provide seed money for educators to develop innovative programs. Since 1993, the ATE program has disbursed $890 million to support a wide variety of programs to improve technician education; prepare science, technology, engineer, and math educators; and conduct research on technician education.
For the 20-year anniversary, ATE Central and Pellet Productions teamed up to create a video about the ATE program and its accomplishments. The American Association of Community Colleges will post videos of the conference plenary sessions, slides from the workshops, and photos from the entire conference on the conference website by November 8.