MSSEF board member and award-winning meteorologist Mish Michaels collaborated with Gerhard Sonnert and Philip Sadler, both of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, on an article that explores the relationship between gender and the science fair experience. Entitled, “Gender Aspects of Participation, Support, and Success in a State Science Fair,” the paper considers data from student participation in the 2009 Massachusetts State Science & Engineering Fair, investigating the role that gender played in students’ participation, choice of science field, award of prizes, and mentioning inspiring teachers.
Among the findings:
- Rather than being under-represented at this science fair, girls were were slightly overrepresented, making up 62% of 2009′s Massachusetts state high school fair participants.
- Girls exhibited a strong preference for the life sciences.
- A gender-matched student–teacher pair held no advantage when it came to outcomes.
The article has been published in “School Science and Mathematics,” the international journal of the School Science and Mathematics Association.

The Cambridge-based non-profit 
Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick has appointed Dr. Pendred “Penny” Noyce to Board of Elementary and Secondary Education.
At the
Here’s a novel idea: a dollhouse complete with assembly-required furniture and working circuit boards. The goal, of course, is to reach girls where they live, so to speak, and encourage an early interest in math and science. The project, called “Roominate,” is the brain child of three women who met as master’s students at Stanford University. Noting the significant gender imbalance in their classes, Alice Brooks, Bettina Chen, and Jennifer Kessler cast their minds back to their own childhoods — and the gender-neutral toys that entertained them. Alice Brooks’ father gave her a saw, for example.