Activities for the week of December 12th – 18th

We are so excited for our third week of DeSTEMber!

Activities for the week of December 12th – 18th

12.12 Citizen Science Sunday: Project Squirrel

12.13 The Franklin Institute

12.14 Benham’s Disk

12.15 Dallas Arboretum

12.16 Secret Sounds

12.17 Throwing Pi

12.18 Moon Observation Saturday: Full Moon

12.12 – Citizen Science Sunday: Project Squirrel 

  • Computer, smartphone, or tablet with internet access

12.13 – The Franklin Institute – Light and Bubbles

  • A blank piece of white paper
  • A darkened room
  • A plate
  • 1/2 cup corn syrup
  • 1/4 cup dishwashing liquid (clear is best but any type will work)
  • 1 cup water
  • Flashlight
  • Straw

12.14 – Benham’s Disk

  • Benham’s Disk template, printed on copy paper or cardstock (attached)
  • Cardboard
  • Clear tape
  • Glue stick
  • Pencil
  • Push pin
  • Scissors

12.15 – Dallas Arboretum – Plant Cuttings: Super Rooters

  • Clean pair of scissors, knife or gardening shears
  • Mature plant stem or vine
  • Vase
  • Water

12.16 – Secret Sounds

  • Metal clothes hanger
  • Ruler
  • Scissors
  • String

12.17 – Throwing Pi

  • Paper
  • Pencil
  • Ruler
  • 20 toothpicks (or more!)

12.18 – Moon Observation Saturday: Full Moon

  • Moon Observation Journal (from Moon Phases activity)

Don’t forget to use AmazonSmile if you’re shopping online so that a percent of your purchase goes to Girlstart!

Activities for the week of December 5th – 11th

We are so excited for our second week of DeSTEMber!

Activities for the week of December 5th – 11th:

12.05 Citizen Science Sunday: Science Action Club

12.06 Scratch™

12.07 Cup Flyer

12.08 Micro:bit

12.09 Hour of Code™

12.10 Reach Across the Stars

12.11 Moon Observation Saturday: Lunar Augmented Reality

12.05 – Citizen Science Sunday: Science Action Club 

  • Computer, smartphone, or tablet with internet access

12.06 – Scratch™

  • Computer or tablet with internet access
  • Superhero Scratch™ Programming Outline (attached to activity)

12.07 – Cup Flyer

  • 2 disposable cups
  • 3-5 rubber bands
  • Tape

12.08 – Micro:bit

  • 2 AAA batteries
  • Computer with USB port, tablet, or smartphone
  • Micro:bit with battery pack

12.09 – Hour of Code™

  • Computer, smartphone, or tablet with internet access

12.10 – Reach Across the Stars

  • Smartphone or tablet with internet access

12.11 – Moon Observation Saturday: Lunar Augmented Reality

  • Smartphone with internet access

Don’t forget to use AmazonSmile if you’re shopping online, a percent of your purchase will go to Girlstart when you use AmazonSmile!

Bruna Dahm

Girlstart’s Women in STEM weekly series highlights various women who are making a difference in STEM. Be inspired as these incredible women describe how they became interested in their field, provide insight into a day in the life, and share learnings from their experiences.

Bruna Dahm

Software Engineer @ Dell Technologies

Briefly describe your career/field.

I was a young mom at 17 years old, I had two kids and not much money, didn’t have a rich family, so I started working with business management, in a company that makes 3D screens for cinema, there I discovered myself in IT due to a project I conducted. Since then, I could not stop studying, I fell in love with the area. I started an internship as a Software Developer when I was at my first semester of school (IT has so many opportunities for those who do not have experience), there I started learning more and more. I built websites that could read data from the database I created, could make automations in large databases regarded to protection data laws. So, when my internship was about to end I started looking for a new job. I’ve always been interested into Data field (Data Science and Data Engineering) and I found one as a Software Engineer at Dell Technologies, to work with big data, data engineering and a little of data science. I thought I couldn’t make it, but I did. And now I work for my dream company and everything is as I always dreamed it could be.

What is your greatest accomplishment?

So far working at Dell as a Software Engineer with Big Data and Data Science, it’s something I’ve always wanted.

Why is confidence in STEM important for girls?

Very important, when I got started in technology I was not very confident about how it would be being a woman in tech. But I started anyway, now I can say there are too many opportunities and my gender hasn’t been an impact. Technology needs us!

What sparked your interest and made you want to volunteer with Girlstart?

I wish I could have had one woman to tell me everything would be great in the area and I would have the same opportunities a man would.

What would you like to tell girls who are interested in pursuing a STEM career? What words of encouragement would you share with them?

I was not good at math in high school but what I’ve learned in these years is that there is absolutely nothing we can’t learn from zero. I came from nowhere, was a young mom and even with this scenery I could make it, so all of you can make it too. Don’t be afraid.

Holly Huynh

Girlstart’s Women in STEM weekly series highlights various women who are making a difference in STEM. Be inspired as these incredible women describe how they became interested in their field, provide insight into a day in the life, and share learnings from their experiences.

Holly Huynh

Director of Digital, Marketing Operations, Analytics @ Mitratech

Meet Holly Huynh, a past Girlstart volunteer and an inspiring woman in STEM! Read about her career journey below!

Briefly describe your career/field.

I came out of college (1st generation college graduate) thinking that I wanted to pursue law, so I interned at the Texas State capitol while working as a legal assistant at a law firm. I eventually moved on to manage a law office, but after going through the admission process and working closely with attorneys, ultimately decided I wanted to focus more on business. I happened to get a job at a tech franchise as a support manager that eventually led me to take over their marketing department, building out my own team and programs. I later moved into a small digital marketing agency start up to focus more on paid advertising and analytics that allowed me to specialize and grow into a senior leadership role. I was later recruited over to Gartner, a large enterprise research company, to lead their paid advertising team which was beginning to struggle. I ended up rebuilding that team and program from the ground up, setting many new company records, and winning their business impact award. During this time, I identified that the biggest obstacles we faced on the marketing side was operational and involved our data cleanliness, which led me to pitch and launch a new marketing operations department to work more closely with the business analytics, engineering, and product management organizations. I eventually moved over to the business analytics organization within Gartner to manage a team of analysts there focused on improving processes, data pipelines, reporting, and training. I recently left Gartner to begin my new role with Mitratech, an enterprise legal and compliance software company, heading up their Digital, Marketing Operations, and Analytics departments. I am building out a digital team that will manage our digital web presence and paid media; a marketing ops team that will manage our lead nurturing programs and tech stack; and analytics team that will handle data accuracy, performance reporting, and data storytelling.

What are your favorite things about your career/field?

I love that the industry is constantly changing and there are always opportunities to continue to learn and move around or build something new. One of my favorite things, while also considered a challenge, is that it is a constant struggle and challenge to earn the female representation in my industry. I love that with the support of the right mentors, I can become a thought leader in my field and prove those who doubted or questioned my abilities. In regards to the field specifically, I love the ability to look at a huge set of data and piecing it together to tell a story, then strategizing to understand where the next opportunities are. It’s like a big, fun game where you keep unlocking new levels.

What projects/programs have you worked on?

Paid advertising (search, display, social, video, etc), brand building, operational improvements, and data analytics involving data pipelines and data visualization tools.

Was there a specific person, program, or event in your life that led you to your STEM career?

There are probably 2 key moments that led me to where I am – the partner of the law firm I was managing who told me he was unhappy, and my next boss, the VP of product strategy at the tech franchise that hired me and allowed me to eventually take over the marketing strategy and build out my own team. That’s where I realized my passion for marketing and business strategy. It just grew from there. I still keep in close contact with that former VP to this day and consider her a mentor.

What is your greatest accomplishment?

I am very proud of how far I’ve come in my career as just a successful female in the tech industry, but why I’m most proud is looking back on what I had to overcome to get here. I am a first generation of my family (parents migrated here from Vietnam), did not learn the English language until I started preschool (where I was then placed in ESL for years), being the first in my family to graduate college, and then having the courage to switch careers into an unknown industry.

What sparked your interest and made you want to volunteer with Girlstart?

I got an email with my previous company for a volunteer opportunity with setup and breakdown of an event. Reading more about what the program stood for and how it can help mentor young girls into the field I’m currently in is really what made me want to get more involved.

What is your favorite Girlstart moment (event, time you volunteered, etc.)?

I’ve only volunteered at one event so far, which was just organizing the set up and breakdown of the event, so my moments are limited, but I loved seeing the look of excitement on the young girls faces as they arrived to sign in and got all of their goodies.

What would you like to tell girls who are interested in pursuing a STEM career? What words of encouragement would you share with them?

I would say that the field is challenging, but it’s the challenges and struggles you will come across that are what make your successes even more rewarding. I would also like them to know that it is possible to have a successful career and a balanced family life, as long as you remember to prioritize your mental health, value yourself, and set personal boundaries.

Why is confidence in STEM important for girls?

More than ever now, female representation and diversity are so important. While I’ve been fortunate to be successful now, I have come across many people in my career who, out of ignorance, culture, or just plain bias, made me really struggle and had me reconsidering my career path. If I can help even one girl persevere through a similar situation, I will consider it a success.