Main Menu

Home InSPIRE

InSPIRE


Program Overview

InSPIRE was funded in 2020 by the U.S National Science Foundation (NSF) Advancing Informal STEM Learning (AISL) to Investigate the Development of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM)-Positive Identities of Refugee Teens in a Physics Out-of-School Time Experience.

This program aims to address the underrepresentation of refugees, who are often racial and ethnic minorities, non-native English speakers, and economically disadvantaged, in STEM disciplines through three major sets of activities:

Participation
Participation in a scientific research project on cosmic rays & computer programming.
Engagement
Engagement in an auto-ethnographic project culminating in digital stories that reflect individual students’ relationships experiences in STEM.
Family Events
Family and community science events designed by the youth for their families and science teachers to attend.

Collaboration

INSPIRE brings together a coalition of scientists and education researchers from University of Utah, Utah State University, Utah Department of Workforce Services Refugee Services Office (RSO), as well as the National Institute for Subatomic Physics (Nikhef) in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. It builds on a solid foundation of two existing programs, REFUGES at the University of Utah and HiSPARC in the Netherlands.

Participants

InSPIRE participants are students from REFUGES afterschool program. They participate in the INSPIRE activities two days per week, and one Saturday per semester during the afterschool hours.

Research

InSPIRE team carries out research and evaluation to answer the following research question and sub-question:

  1. Do students author convergent or divergent disciplinary identities across the contexts, relationships, and modes of interaction afforded by INSPIRE over the course of the study?
  2. Under what conditions do students author specific disciplinary identities (e.g., physics and computing) versus more general science or STEM identities?

InSPIRE Gallery

InSPIRE Leadership Team

Tino Nyawelo
Tino Nyawelo
PI, Physicist
John N Mathews
John N Mathews
Co- PI, Physicist
Jordan Gerton
Jordan Gerton
Co- PI, Physicist
Kerri Hopkins
Kerri Hopkins
Digital Storytelling
Ricardo Gonzalez
Ricardo Gonzalez
Cosmic Ray Instructor & Research Assistant
Sarah Braden
Sarah Braden
Co-PI, Linguist & Education Researcher - USU
Sherry Marx
Sherry Marx
Qualitative research methods - USU
Aryn Dotterer
Aryn Dotterer
Quantitative research methods - USU
Bolaji Bamidele
Bolaji Bamidele
Graduate Research Assistant - USU
Lingga Sugganda
Lingga Sugganda
Graduate Research Assistant - USU
Raquel Goldrup
Raquel Goldrup
Undergraduate Research Assistant - USU

Advisory Board

The role of the five advisory board members is to serve as a critical friend; provide counsel and advice on, and an external review of, the project’s implementation and research efforts and findings, and provide a summative expert review on the project as a whole at the end of the project.

  • Edna Tan, Professor, Science Education, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
  • Minjung Ryu, Associate Professor, and Director of Undergraduate Studies Chemistry
  • Priya Mohabir, Senior Vice President, Youth Programs and Museum Culture at New York Hall of Science
  • Larry Madden, Educator, Retied Interim Superintendent Salt Lake City School District
  • Robert Simbe, Outcomes Director, English Skills Learning Center

External Evaluation Team

External evaluation for the INSPIRE Program is provided by Inverness Research, which specializes in the evaluation of educational programs. Inverness will also facilitate the work of the advisory board.