Washington Business Winter 2016 | Page 42

business backgrounder | education & workforce Beyond the Bot Washington FIRST Robotics program helps build excitement for STEM careers. Malia Jacobson Washington’s FIRST Robotics is part of a national program that introduces high school students to the possibility of a STEM career by showing them it’s about more than just robot battles and LEGOS. “I was more interested in the business aspect of the team, the organizational dynamics and project management. FIRST is about so much more than just building a robot.” When recent college graduate Marissa Birmingham joined the FIRST Robotics team as a freshman at Tacoma’s Bellarmine high school, she wasn’t drawn by a shiny robot or a chance to learn programming or engineering. She just wanted to hang out with her friends. “I was a typical teenager and friends were important to me,” says Birmingham, who earned a 2015 degree in engineering — Marissa Birmingham, a recent management from University of Portland. “I had some girlfriends in the club, college graduate whose experience so I gave it a try.” with the FIRST program opened her eyes Over the next four years of high school, Birmingham fell in love with FIRST to the possibility of a STEM career Robotics, logging hundreds of hours coordinating the team’s intense yearly competitions. FIRST opened her eyes to the possibility of a career in a STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) field, something she’d never considered. Given her passion for FIRST Robotics programs — she’s currently an event volunteer — people are often surprised to learn that she’s not that into robotics. “I was more at a glance interested in the business aspect of the team, the organizational dynamics and project management,” she says. “FIRST is about so much more than just building a robot.” FIRST program offerings begin at age 6, with Junior FIRST LEGO League for kindergarten through third grade and continue through grade 12 FIRST competitions focus on collaboration and learning to work side-by-side with teammates on intense, real-world challenges, just as they would do in a workplace. Many FIRST clubs are school-based, operated as an extracurricular club. This year, 11,239 Washington students were involved, comprising nearly 1,000 teams. FIRST projects growth of 36 percent by 2017. Members of “Lord of the Gears,” a middle school FIRST Robotics team from Renton, show off their LEGO creations at the 2015 AWB Manufacturing Summit. 42 association of washington business