Alternative Spring Break: HCDE Workshop

  • Would you like to do something meaningful on your spring break this year?
  • Would you like to play an important role in K-12 outreach for HCDE and the UW?
  • Are you interested in traveling to rural Washington to mentor middle and high school students?

Alternative Spring Break (ASB) is an outreach program organized by the UW’s Pipeline Project. It provides opportunities for teams of undergraduate students to spend their spring break in a rural or tribal community of Washington State, working with local schools.

This year, in partnership with the Pipeline Project, HCDE is running its third ASB program, and will send two teams of undergraduates to Neah Bay, Washington, the Makah Tribe town, to lead middle and high school students in an HCDE Workshop.

The workshop will focus on physical computing for citizen science, using the Circuit Playground Express (Arduino) platform. Over the course of the week, the workshop students, guided by the HCDE student team, will develop and deploy a scientific instrument that can be used to gather field data.

HCDE Alternative Spring Break 2017

hcde.uw.edu/videos/asb

The above video captures the experience of the first HCDE Pipeline ASB project team in 2017. You can also read more about the team’s work here: hcde.uw.edu/news/hcde-alternative-spring-break-recap.

To prepare for the ASB workshop, the HCDE student team will participate in a winter quarter DRG. In the DRG, they will develop and pilot the curriculum, learn the essentials of engaging with students in their community, and generally prepare for this outreach adventure. The DRG will meet one evening each week (either Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday, TBD) from 6:00 — 8:00 pm.

In addition to registering for this 2-credit DRG, participants must also be willing to spend spring break week (March 23 – 29, 2019) on the ASB trip. Housing, transportation, food, and incidental expenses for the trip will be arranged and paid for by the department.

For the ASB workshop, we are seeking dedicated and enthusiastic undergraduates with generous spirit who are passionate about mentoring and inspiring young learners. Participants must be a current HCDE undergraduate student, and have completed HCDE 210 or HCDE 318, and ideally also HCDE 439.

To apply for the program, please fill out this online application «goo.gl/forms/AYKvkU0f5l4ITjR83» by Saturday, November 24 at 11:59 pm.

In the application, you will be asked to submit your resume, in PDF form, and to answer a number of essay questions, but you do not have to complete them all in the same session. This is a summary of the essay questions:

  • Why are you interested in the ASB project? Tell us about your academic and personal goals, and how ASB might help you achieve them.
  • What experiences do you have working with, teaching, or mentoring teens and children?
  • An important part of ASB is working as part of a closely-knit team. What personal characteristics and experiences do you have that will positively contribute to the team dynamic?
  • Relate an experience in which you worked with an individual or group from a different background than your own. What did you learn from the experience?
  • What aspect of human centered design do you find most compelling, and why?
  • Do you have any special interests, skills, or experience that you think would be useful on an ASB team?
  • Is there anything else that you would like to share with us?

We will also require an interview with selected applicants between November 26 and December 7. Students who are accepted to the program will be notified by December 11.

If you are interested in this exciting opportunity to make a difference in young people’s lives, inspire them about the potential of human centered design and a college education, to learn about and engage with communities in rural Washington, and enrich your life in many ways, please consider applying for the HCDE ASB program!

If you have any questions about the program or the application process, please get in touch with one of us:

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