Girls Who Build Curricula
Creative engineering workshops for high school girls
Solution Summary
The gender gap in engineering stems from two major problems: a lack of female role models and a lack of engineering curricula designed for girls. Girls Who Build fills these gaps by developing hands-on, applied engineering curricula to inspire girls to pursue STEM careers.
Girls Who Build provides these online curricula to users for free, and also leads workshops for a fee on MIT’s campus and at the MIT Lincoln Laboratory for teachers and students. With themes like music, wearable tech, camera physics, and robotics, learning is fun and engaging. The workshops prepare girls with the skills they need to succeed in an engineering career.
Market Opportunity
- Women are an untapped resource in the growing field of STEM, making up only 25 percent of its workforce.
- While less than one percent of girls plan to study computer science in college, 76 percent of girls become interested in engineering when they are shown what engineers do.
Highlights
- Launched Girls Who Build Music Tech Workshop for hands-on intro to music technology
- Recently received 501(c)3 status
Organization Goals
- Manufacture and sell the engineering kits used in coursework
Existing Partnerships
Girls Who Build currently partners with:
- MIT Lincoln Laboratory
- MIT OpenCourseware
- Solidworks
- Society of Women Engineers
Partnership Goals
Girls Who Build seeks partners to support:
- Technology access, STEM education, future of work
- Funding to continue building business
- Pre-Seed
Girls Who Build is a series of creative and applied engineering curricula for girls. Our topics are on things girls love, like music, and on the problems they want to solve, like climate change. The courses are developed by engineers, tested with local girls, and published online for access everywhere.
Girls Who Build addresses the gender gap in STEM by fixing two major problems: a lack of role models and engineering curricula designed for girls.
In the media, like the TV show Silicon Valley, engineers are traditionally depicted as nerdy white men who are hackers and car enthusiasts. Secondly, existing STEM programs have instruction based curricula, so no problem solving or teamwork is required. The activities are stereotypical and disconnected from applications; for example, building a balloon-powered car for mechanical engineering. Lastly, there is no Girls Who Code equivalent in hardware—coding clubs are more prevalent than hardware programs.
Our theory of change is to breakdown stereotypes with engineering courses in things girls love. For instance, our next program is in music and 70% of high school choirs are girls. We also feature female keynotes to give girls role models.
Additionally, we address the lack of curricula for girls. According to Girls Scouts, girls prefer team-working and creative problem solving. In our programs, the girls work in pairs on challenges that sometimes fail, so they think outside of the box.
Lastly, our programs are made by engineers so we teach advanced and multi-disciplinary topics like signal processing.
The impact of my solution is inspiring girls to pursue a career in engineering. Educators, parents, and students will all benefit from free, online Girls Who Build courses developed by engineers. The courses will be published online on MIT Opencourseware. The programs will also be deployed through established organizations like Girl Scouts who need new courses in mechanical and electrical engineering. With their expansive programs of educators and students, they can help us scale.
My target outcomes are: 5 new courses, 5000 visits on each course site, and a partnership with a major nonprofit like Girl Scouts.
Annually, a Girls Who Build workshop is hosted at MIT with local high school girls and published on MIT Opencourseware. The curriculum is presented at the National SWE Conference or Grace Hopper to other educators. - 5 New Girls Who Build courses tested, developed, and published
Track number of visits and downloads on our course websites on MIT Opencourseware and Itunes video store. - 5000 visits on MIT Opencourseware course sites of Girls Who Build curricula
Girls Who Build curriculum is incorporated into a major non-profit's program, like a Girl Scout badge. - Partnership with major non-profit (ie. New Girl Scout Badge in signal processing)
- Child
- Adolescent
- Adult
- High-income economies
- Female
- Europe and Central Asia
- US and Canada
- Aero/astrospace engineering
- Digital systems (machine learning, control systems, big data)
- Electrical engineering
- Mechanical engineering and hardware
- Physics
Girls Who Build curricula is uniquely made by engineers. Consider one of the largest girls engineering programs, Girls Who Code, where the founder started in politics and law.
Our approach is to make curricula that has never existed before, that is both application-focused and advanced. For instance, we taught image processing in our camera workshop. The Girls Who Build courses also show how engineering is collaborative, multi-disciplinary, and creative. We require girls to work in teams and problem solve. Lastly, we choose topics that are not stereotypical but on things girls use and see everyday, like music and sports.
Each year, Girls Who Build courses are developed and tested with local high school girls in Massachusetts. The curricula is created by engineering volunteers from local companies like MIT Lincoln Laboratory. The girls who attend come from a range of high schools and backgrounds. About half of our students have exposure to computer science, and fewer have experience with hardware. During the workshop, we get direct feedback from students and educators—what we did well and what can be improved—and most importantly, if we inspired the girls to pursue engineering as a career.
After each course is developed and tested at MIT with local high school girls, we publish the curriculum on MIT Opencourseware. The free, online course includes videos, instructions, and advice for running parts of the Girls Who Build curriculum. Larger organizations like Society of Engineers who need new engineering programs, can also scale our curriculum with their established infrastructure. They have expansive programs with educators and students as well as funding to provide hardware to underserved communities.
- 6-8 (Demonstration)
- Non-Profit
- United States
First, as a PhD student at MIT I will leverage the available resources on campus for funding a non-profit. To grow, I will seek corporate sponsorship, by involving local companies in the development of the workshops. For example, to teach computer aided design, Solidworks provided free software to the Girls Who Build wearables workshop. I am also sponsored by MIT Lincoln Laboratory who has provided space, volunteers, materials, and funding. By being based in Cambridge, there is enormous opportunity to partner with local companies and MIT.
MIT Opencourseware has also partnered with us in publishing our curriculums so they can be accessible everywhere. In addition, Girls Who Build leadership will present the curricula at major education conferences like the national Society of Women Engineers to publicize the novel and free engineering courses. In the future, we will partner with larger organizations like Girl Scouts to scale our curricula.
One of the hardest challenges of doing a hardware workshop with students is finding the funding to pay for materials. We plan to work with corporate donations, like how Solidworks provided free software to our workshop, to overcome this barrier.
The other challenge will be convincing an established non-profit like Girl Scouts to incorporate a new curriculum. Unlike Boy Scouts, Girls Scouts do not have a proposal process for new badges.
- 3 years
- We have already developed a pilot.
- We have already scaled beyond pilot.
https://ocw-mit-edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/resources/res-2-006-girls-who-build-cameras-summer-2016/index.htm
https://ocw-mit-edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/resources/res-2-005-girls-who-build-make-your-own-wearables-workshop-spring-2015/
https://www.facebook.com/girlswhobuild/
- Technology Access
- Future of Work
- 21st Century Skills
- Online Learning
- STEM Education
I am applying to Solve to scale Girls Who Build courses. Solve can connect me to the right partners, like engineering companies--Amazon, Google, and Adafruit-- to develop new curriculum and provide hardware, and non-profits like Girl Scouts to incorporate our courses into a national program.
I will also use Solve for funding and legal advice in starting and sustaining a non-profit.
My partners include MIT Lincoln Laboratory, MIT Opencourseware, Solidworks, and Society of Women Engineers.
I am not aware of any company creating free, online engineering curriculum specifically for girls.
Solver Team
Organization Type:
Nonprofit
Headquarters:
Lexington, MA, USA
Company Stage:
Pilot
Working in:
USA
Employees:
3

Founder
