Lakeshore Fab Lab STEM lab will start hosting fieldtrips and and events! With our new STEM instructor Jessica Sisco, we are planning events to introduce K-12 students to STEM projects and events.
Muskegon Community College has received a $238,200 People Award project grant from the Consumers Energy Foundation to support the creation of a STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math) Lab and the hiring of a STEM coordinator to help K-12 students learn about the connection of STEM to skilled trades careers.
The People Awards, which were announced on Jan. 20, also included a $150,000 grant to the Ottawa and Allegan County United Way and a $100,000 grant to the Michigan Community College Association.
“The three People Award projects we have selected for funding will bolster our state’s most valuable resource, our people,” said Brandon Hofmeister, president of the Consumers Energy Foundation, which is the charitable arm of Michigan’s largest energy provider. “We operate with a triple bottom line mindset focusing on People, the Planet and our state’s Prosperity, and these People Award grants serve an important role in helping Michiganders improve their future economic prosperity and meet their immediate needs.”
“Knowing the current talent crisis, Muskegon Community College wants to assist all levels of educational providers with preparing students for the workforce,” noted Cyndi Langlois, associate dean of workforce and talent development at MCC. “The People Award grant from the Consumers Energy Foundation allows us to focus on STEM education at all levels within the K-12 system.”
The funds will be used to employ a 20-hour per week STEM Education Coordinator for the next three years, as well as for STEM related equipment, material, and curriculum, explained Langlois. The Consumers Energy STEM Lab will be located in MCC’s Rooks|Sarnicola Entrepreneur Institute in downtown Muskegon.
“We want to connect to current K-12 curriculum to support the STEM fields, to help students learn about post-secondary educational opportunities and to learn about career opportunities in high-demand and high wage fields with a specific focus on manufacturing,” said Langlois, who hopes to have 2,000 students annually access the STEM Lab.
Projected to be operational by June 2022, the STEM lab will be open on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays.
The grant will also help support school districts with funding to bus their students to the STEM Lab.
“Many rural and urban schools have barriers to accessing resources due to inability to pay for bussing,” said Langlois. “We want to ensure populations from all over the region have equitable access to the STEM Lab.”