Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Girl Scouts Sees a High Tech Future

Newsday: "Girl Scouts See a High-tech Future"

In a column for Newsday titled "Girl Scouts see a High-tech Future", Jennifer Wheary writes that Girl Scouts is taking a lead role in improving America's STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) skills by respecting young women as prospective scientists and scientifically literate workers, and by bringing awareness and excellent opportunities to millions of girls who might otherwise not pursue their passion for science.

"Getting girls interested in science is nothing new to the Girl Scouts," states Wheary. "The organization has worked for many years with partners including NASA, the National Science Foundation, Dell, AT&T, Google and Lockheed Martin to provide learning opportunities for their troops. Thousands of girls throughout the country have earned badges and participated in leadership courses that involve STEM subjects. Scouts are designing and building robots, completing energy audits in buildings, assessing air quality, and doing sophisticated math, computer programming and graphic design."

According to the Girl Scout Research Institute study Generation STEM: What Girls Say about Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math, though a majority of today’s girls have a clear interest in STEM, they don’t prioritize STEM fields when thinking about their future careers.

This latest offering from the Girl Scout Research Institute shows that 74 percent of teen girls are interested in STEM subjects and the general field of study. Further, a high 82 percent of girls see themselves as “smart enough to have a career in STEM.” And yet, few girls consider it their number-one career option: 81 percent of girls interested in STEM are interested in pursuing STEM careers, but only 13 percent say it’s their first choice. Additionally, girls express that they don’t know a lot about STEM careers and the opportunities afforded by these fields, with 60 percent of STEM-interested girls acknowledging that they know more about other careers than they do about STEM careers.

"America has a huge opportunity for economic growth when looking at girls' interest in science, technology, engineering and math," says Anna Maria Chávez, chief executive of the Girl Scouts of the USA. "It is in this country's best interest to make girls feel supported and capable when it comes to involvement in STEM fields -- and anything else they set their minds to and have traditionally been steered away from. Our research shows that girls do just as well in math and science as boys do, but their confidence in their math and science abilities is lower than boys."

"The task is to convert girls' intelligence and interest into a long-term love for science and technology, and, ultimately, employment in STEM occupations," states Wheary. "To do this, girls need to develop confidence and resilience. We need to create ways for them to continually interact with science, to face their fears and failures with strength and grace, and to be supported as they meet obstacles... The Girl Scouts' past 100 years of achievement is laudable, and its current focus on STEM means that the organization's impact will continue well into the next century."

Friday, March 9, 2012

Celebrate Girl Scouts' 100th Anniversary with Cookie Recipes

photo credit: Tovia Smith/NPR
Look at those faces. Aren't they adorable?!

It's cookies season for the Girl Scouts and girls are out in force hawking Thin Mints, Samoas, Tagalongs and more.   But Girl Scouts is about a whole lot more than baked goods, as this story from NPR's Tovia Smith explains.


Vestavia Troops 27 and 145 still have nearly 500 boxes of cookies to sell and nearly as many ways to use them.  Um, let's see: 
  1. Straight out of the box one Thin Mint sleeve at a time!
  2. Not Yo Mama's Banana Pudding (with Trefoils) 
  3. Bourbon Samoa Bars (bourbon. need I say more?)
  4. Thin Mint Chocolate Cheesecake
And that's just a sample. Check the links for even more recipes.

Need some cookies to do your recipe sampling?  Troops 27 and 145 are holding a cookie booth tomorrow (3/10) from 10 a.m. to ?? at the Hoover WalMart on 150. Come out, say "Hi!" and get your sugar on...

Monday, March 5, 2012

Girl Scouts Up the Ante on Mobile Payments for Girl Scout Cookies





"Mobile payments is really kicking off this year, especially in light of Square’s latest app for the iPad, centering on new payments services ana analytics.  What started as a payment service offered by a handful of tech startups has since expanded to incorporate banks, mobile operators, credit card networks, payments startups, tech companies, and now, even retailers offer the service since they can offer a more secured mobile wallet program...." (read the rest of the article, including how Girl Scouts are getting in on the action, at SiliconeAngle.com

Boy Scouts are from Mars, Girl Scouts are from Venus





When the Indiana House of Representatives took up a resolution to honor the Girl Scouts' 100thanniversary, freshman Republican representative Bob Morris refused to sign. Instead he sent colleagues a letter warning that the Girl Scouts were not a benign, cookie-peddling kids' organization but rather "a group that has been subverted in the name of liberal progressive politics" with "surprisingly radical policies" -- and, in fact, "a tactical arm of Planned Parenthood." His February 18 letter made the national news, and while he later walked back some of his criticisms - writing, in part, "I realize now that my words were emotional, reactionary, and inflammatory" - Morris reiterated his objections to the Girl Scouts, citing the group's support of reproductive health education and quoting "Blessed Pope John Paul II" on the topic of abortion....  (read the full article at The Atlantic)