Undaunted passion: Making STEM education accessible
Tsewone Melaku discovered engineering in high school through a UW mentorship program. Now a UW student majoring in and minoring in Education, Learning and Society, she is aligning her interests in engineering with her passion to make STEM education accessible to underrepresented high school students.
Melaku benefited from many of the same UW college access programs in which she now holds leadership roles, such as the and the program. She shares with us why it鈥檚 important to prioritize social justice issues and how she balances volunteering with her engineering studies.
What led you to the UW?
I attended high school here in Seattle, first at Ingraham and then at Chief Sealth. I struggled with math during my sophomore year to the point that I nearly failed. A friend was involved with Making Connections, a college readiness program offered through the UW Women鈥檚 Center. The program prepares Seattle-area high school girls from low-income communities for success in STEM fields in college. It offers everything from one-on-one tutoring and mentoring to college tours, job shadowing opportunities and college application workshops.
I got involved with Making Connections because I needed a tutor, but it opened my eyes to so much more! I鈥檓 the first in my family to go to college; my parents are from Ethiopia, and the higher education system here was completely unfamiliar to us. After Making Connections, I sought out all the admissions support programs I could. I passed my math class and attended Young, Gifted and Black, a UW conference on social consciousness, cultural awareness and the importance of higher education for Black high school students. I signed up for the Dream Project, a program that partners UW students with first-generation and underrepresented high school students to assist in the college admissions process. I also joined UW鈥檚 Young Executives of Color program, certain that I鈥檇 major in business.
Why did you decide to study HCDE?
I first learned about HCDE through a Making Connections networking event, where a panel of Seattle-area women engineers talked to us about their careers. One woman 鈥 an employee at Boeing 鈥 was an HCDE alumna. I鈥檇 never heard of HCDE, but as she described it, I just kept thinking how cool it sounded. HCDE focuses on end users; it鈥檚 a field of engineering that鈥檚 all about helping people, and that really aligned with my personal interests.
Not long after enrolling at the UW, I switched from being a pre-business major to majoring in HCDE. It鈥檚 been a great fit. I love the way it鈥檚 trained me to think creatively and solve problems.
Tell us more about how HCDE and your academic goals overlap with your interests in creating awareness, access and exposure to opportunities for underrepresented high school students.
I want to use my engineering background to help transform education, so I鈥檓 also minoring in the UW鈥檚 Education, Learning & Society program. My research interests involve the lack of diversity in higher education, particularly in STEM. I want to figure out ways to create better technology 鈥 and technical literacy 鈥 for underserved K-12 classrooms. There are huge gaps between technology, access and underrepresented communities. I hope to apply HCDE鈥檚 approach to user-centered problem solving and design to create technologies that meet the needs of low-income and underserved students.
I want to put my degree to work after graduating, but I also want to go to graduate school and study human-computer interaction. My ultimate goal is a Ph.D. in engineering education.
You continue to be involved with Making Connections and the Dream Project as an engineering student. Why?
Making Connections is my second family, and I help anytime I can. I want kids to believe that higher education is an option, even if it seems impossible. I鈥檝e been there; I know how tough it can be when you鈥檙e fifteen and asked to think about your college aspirations, yet the idea of going to college seems like something beyond your world. If I can share my experiences and skills in ways that help high schoolers see themselves as part of this world, then count me in. Especially for girls of color. If we want girls of color to pursue STEM, they need to see women of color being successful in STEM fields.
I got involved with the Dream Project primarily to help transform it. I valued what the program was trying to do but from my high school experience, I saw ways it could be improved. I was invited to join the Dream Project鈥檚 leadership team and teach UW students how to be mentors in high schools after serving as a mentor myself. We鈥檝e reshaped the course curriculum to include 鈥 and prioritize 鈥 topics like power, privilege, oppression, racism and social awareness. Many of the Dream Project鈥檚 student mentors are white or come from privileged backgrounds, and most of the high school students they鈥檙e mentoring aren鈥檛, and we felt that it was crucial to overhaul our training practices. We鈥檝e also updated the program鈥檚 mission statement and introduced racial equity workshops for leaders and mentors.
You鈥檙e also involved with the UW chapter of National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) and Women in Science & Engineering (WiSE). Tell us about your roles with these organizations.
I started working with WiSE this summer as the program assistant for WiSE UP BRIDGE, a first-year academic program for women engineering students. Last year, I served as UW NSBE鈥檚 Pre-College Initiative (PCI) Chair and am now serving as the regional PCI Chair. In this role, I work with Black high school students who want to pursue engineering in college. This year we鈥檒l be starting two NSBE Jr. high school chapters in Seattle! In addition to helping them and the other UW chapter leaders, I鈥檒l also be planning the regional PCI conference for NSBE.
How do you balance your engineering studies with your commitments to UW access programs?
I鈥檓 involved in a lot of campus activities, but they鈥檙e activities that I鈥檓 passionate about. I never feel like, 鈥淥h great, I have to go do X.鈥 It鈥檚 always more like, 鈥淐ool, I get to go do X.鈥 I try to make time for the things that make me happy. I鈥檓 fortunate that engineering is one of those things. Helping people makes me happy, and through HCDE I鈥檓 learning all sorts of new ways to help.
I wanted to be an engineer to prove that I could do it and to show other Black girls that they could, too. Being an engineering student 鈥 as well as a mentor, teacher and advocate on campus 鈥 is a lot of work, but it鈥檚 work that I care about and that I want to do. That makes a huge difference, I think.
This story was by the UW College of Engineering.
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Dustin Wunderlich, Director of Marketing and Communications
206-543-1035, dwunder@uw.edu