U Akron Teacher College Opens STEM Education Center

An Ohio education college has established a new center to help teachers attain STEM professional development. The Urban STEM Education Center at the University of Akron's College of Education will also conduct research and evaluate STEM education programs at the local, state and federal levels.

According to Karen Plaster, co-director of the center and an associate professor of practice, the college pursued the initiative for two reasons: First, partnering school districts were seeking STEM training for their teachers; second, the college, which has an urban focus, thought the new center would "further support our faculty's existing collaborations with urban school districts."

College faculty will visit partnering school districts, including those in Summit and Start counties, to evaluate educators' STEM education needs and their current programs. Also, the center will offer STEM-oriented workshops for teachers as part of their credentialing requirements.

During the open house for the Urban STEM Education Center, student members of an area robotics club demonstrated a robot made out of Legos as part of the First Lego League, a competition for elementary and middle school students. Source: Urban STEM Education Center.

During the open house for the Urban STEM Education Center, student members of an area robotics club demonstrated a robot made out of Legos as part of the First Lego League, a competition for elementary and middle school students. Source: Urban STEM Education Center.

An advisory board with current STEM education faculty, STEM experts from elsewhere on campus and representation from STEM organizations in the community will soon be set up.

Among the upcoming events and workshops is a mini-hackathon for girls in grades 6-12, a math teachers' "circle immersion," an engineering summer camp and a summer teacher institute covering STEM education and entrepreneurship.

"Our new Urban STEM Education Center will provide valuable professional development and research expertise to educators in our urban and inner-ring suburban districts as we collectively develop new methods to educate elementary and secondary students in STEM content areas," said Jarrod Tudor, interim dean of the college, in a statement. "Additionally, our teacher education students who desire positions in these districts will be exposed to data-driven and tested instructional methodologies, which will make them the best candidates for education jobs as they graduate."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • Abstract AI circuit board pattern

    Nonprofit LawZero to Work Toward Safer, Truthful AI

    Turing Award-winning AI researcher Yoshua Bengio has launched LawZero, a nonprofit aimed at developing AI systems that prioritize safety and truthfulness over autonomy.

  • abstract pattern of cybersecurity, ai and cloud imagery

    Report Identifies Malicious Use of AI in Cloud-Based Cyber Threats

    A recent report from OpenAI identifies the misuse of artificial intelligence in cybercrime, social engineering, and influence operations, particularly those targeting or operating through cloud infrastructure. In "Disrupting Malicious Uses of AI: June 2025," the company outlines how threat actors are weaponizing large language models for malicious ends — and how OpenAI is pushing back.

  • tutor and student working together at a laptop

    You've Paid for Tutoring. Here's How to Make Sure It Works.

    As districts and states nationwide invest in tutoring, it remains one of the best tools in our educational toolkit, yielding positive impacts on student learning at scale. But to maximize return on investment, both financially and academically, we must focus on improving implementation.

  • red brick school building with a large yellow "AI" sign above its main entrance

    New National Academy for AI Instruction to Provide Free AI Training for Educators

    In an effort to "transform how artificial intelligence is taught and integrated into classrooms across the United States," the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), in partnership with Microsoft, OpenAI, Anthropic, and the United Federation of Teachers, is launching the National Academy for AI Instruction, a $23 million initiative that will provide access to free AI training and curriculum for all AFT members, beginning with K-12 educators.