STEM – Making Room For Girls

ada_lovelace_portrait-1 CC0

11 October is Ada Lovelace Day, a commemoration the plucky Nineteenth Century woman who pioneered computer programming. Ada was the daughter of brooding poet Lord Byron. Ada’s mother, who feared her daughter would inherit some of her father’s flamboyant poetic tendencies, put Ada on a strict diet of mathematics and logic.

The result was a fabulously gifted mathematical mind. Her mentor, Charles Babbage, referred to her as “The Enchantress of Numbers.” The efforts to curb the Byron flamboyance were not as successful. Apparently, Ada was odd. (As a Quirky Kid advocate and die-hard fan, I suspect today we would celebrate — or at least allow for — her neuro-diversity).

Ada Lovelace Day & STEM

STEM stands for science, technology, engineering and mathematics, all areas that have remained relatively closed to women and girls. 11 October provides an occasion to encourage girls to study STEM subjects and celebrate the noteworthy achievements of STEM career women around the world. It’s also a day to consider:

How do we entice girls to study STEM subjects?

How do we break down the stereotypes that suggest STEM subjects are “for boys”?

Start by putting inspiring STEM books in the hands of both girls and boys. Give them exciting books about girls like Ada Lovelace. Introduce them to stories that incorporate maths, natural sciences, engineering and technology.

Recommended STEM Books for Kids

Here’s my own #STEM story for kids featuring a girl-genius inventress and spy quartermistress for Queen Victoria. (Chicken House, 2023)

It’s available now through online sellers and in the UK’s best bookstores. The audiobook is available through Audible, and the Australian release is in early 2024.

Meanwhile, here are some faves:

Case_Missing_Moonstone_Wollstonecraft_Detective

Mystery lovers will enjoy The Case of the Missing Moonstone, written by Jordan Stratford and illustrated by Kelly Murphy. This rollicking Regency romp stars Ada Byron and Mary Shelley (who wrote Frankenstein) as they put their superior minds to work on solving a whodunit. (MG)

4/5 Stars

The_Lie_Tree_FHardinge

Frances Hardinge’s The Lie Tree by  is a brilliant book about a 14-year-old aspiring natural scientist growing up in Victorian England. This story has fossils galore, freaky flora, lashings of fantasy — and murder. Oh, and we mustn’t forget the very clever girl. (Upper MG)

I can’t recommend this book enough, which falls into my favourite genre, Gaslamp Fantasy.

5/5 Stars

Flavia_de_Luce_1

No STEM list would be complete without the wonderful Flavia de Luce Series (also known as The Buckshaw Chronicles in some places) by Alan Bradley. She’s debuts in The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie. This precocious eleven year old protagonist plays with poison — literally! She’s a budding chemist who lives in a manor, which houses its own laboratory, thanks to some bygone relatives who specialised in this branch of science. Her brand of naughtiness sometimes verges on outrageous, but she’s a delightful amateur sleuth nonetheless. MG, 4/5 stars

For Younger Children

Engibear‘s Dream and Engibear’s Bridge, written by Andrew King and illustrated by Benjamin Johnston, are the most delightful picture books about engineering. Honestly — read the sweet stories and feast your eyes on the amazing artwork. I dare not to be inspired! Be sure to check out the app and the website. (PB/JF)

screen-shot-2016-10-13-at-1-52-23-am     screen-shot-2016-10-13-at-1-52-12-am    5/5 Stars

Porotait of Ada by Alfred Edward Chalon [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons, CC0

6 responses to “STEM – Making Room For Girls”

  1. Start young is my advice! I’m teaching kindergarten to 3 and 4 year olds and the room is full of activities for them to explore. We have trays of magnets and magnifying glasses, all kinds of shells and feathers, silkworms going through their fascinating life cycles and landform and volcanos exploding in the sandpit!
    Every day there is paper, pencils, paint and many other media for them to record what they see.
    It’s all so much fun and the children discover something new every day.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I want to play at your house!

      Sounds like so much fun. Fostering curiosity is crucial, don’t you think? Your kids and students must have a ball. They’re so lucky you’re so enthusiastic and willing.

      When I was little, I had a few stages of scientific exploration that must have tested my mother’s patience: my tadpole/toad catching phase and my worm farming (decades before it was a thing) stage.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. […] via STEM – Making Room For Girls — Spilling Ink […]

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  3. These books look like great recommendations and all are new to me. I’m familiar with two recently released beautiful picture-books about Ada, but didn’t have anything for middle grade. Love the title of your own upcoming book, I’ll be keeping an eye out for Winifred Weatherby Saves the Century–congratulations!

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Reblogged this on Pearlz Dreaming and commented:
    This is a really interesting post from my writing buddy Ali.

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  5. […] The Animal Lighthouse, and what a serendipitous meeting it was! He writes STEM stories; I write STEM stories (Science, Technology, Engineering, & Maths). He lives in Frome, the location of Chicken […]

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