Valley Catholic Middle School student Agamya Guttal tells KGW TV how important the STEM classes are, even for students like her, who plan to go into other fields — law in Agamya’s case. (Courtesy Valley Catholic)
Valley Catholic seventh-grader Jaya McGregor considers what Sarah Beethe, a PhD student in geology at Oregon State University, has said in Beethe’s Zoom presentation during Women in STEM day at Valley Catholic Middle School. (Kristen Hannum/Catholic Sentinel)
Jamie Alfieri Tuss, a Valley Catholic alumna, never thought her career would be in a STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) field. “I really struggled in science and math in school,” she said. “I figured I’d be a starving artist.”
Sarah Beethe, a PhD student in geology at Oregon State University, tells seventh grade students at Valley Catholic Middle School that her life changed when she stopped keeping to college classes she was good at and began studying subjects she was interested in. (Kristen Hannum/Catholic Sentinel)
A -poster in a Valley Catholic Middle School classroom promotes good digital citizenship. (Kristen Hannum/Catholic Sentinel)
Valley Catholic sixth-graders get to the hands-on part of the OMSI presentation on earthquakes at the school’s Women in STEM day. (Kristen Hannum/Catholic Sentinel)
Melissa Iserson, director of design thinking at Valley Catholic Middle School, organized the Women in STEM day.
Alumna Caitlin Blood, who teaches sustainability and agriculture at MITCH Charter School in Tualatin, challenged the STEM-immersed students with questions about human nature that technology cannot solve.
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