New KC STEM Alliance leader: All students have a place in Kansas City’s emerging Tech Hub

January 9, 2024  |  Startland News Staff

Dr. Chelsea Barbercheck, KC STEM Alliance

Growing Kansas City as a hub for STEM industries brings additional opportunities for connection and collaboration, the incoming leader of the KC STEM Alliance said, highlighting the role young people can play in the evolving innovation economy.

“Kansas City and the surrounding region’s designation as a 2023 Tech Hub (KC BioHub) brings a real opportunity to leverage resources for students in a way that builds long-lasting synergy for the region’s workforce development across multiple STEM fields,” said Dr. Chelsea Barbercheck, who begins her role as executive director of the KC STEM Alliance Jan. 29.

RELATED: KC officially earns title of ‘Tech Hub,’ opening door to massive federal grant funding

Martha McCabe, Project Lead The Way

The KC STEM Alliance, a collaborative network of educators, businesses and related organizations that champions STEM education initiatives across the region. Barbercheck succeeds longtime executive director Martha McCabe, who moved into a national role with Project Lead The Way in 2023.

Click here to read more about McCabe’s departure from KC STEM Alliance after a decade.

When Barbercheck begins work later this month in Kansas City, she’ll bring a wealth of experience in managing collaborative programs with multiple stakeholders. She most recently served as the Manhattan, Kansas-based executive director for Great Plains IDEA (Great Plains Interactive Distance Education Alliance) and was the inaugural program director for Boston University’s BEST (Broadening Experiences in Scientific Training), a National Institutes of Health-funded initiative to expose doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers to potential career pathways.

Barbercheck earned a doctoral degree in Microbiology, Cell, and Molecular Genetics from Oklahoma State University and completed post-doctoral research with the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas and Boston University.

“I’m thrilled to serve as the next KC STEM Alliance director,” Barbercheck said. “By instilling design thinking and problem-solving skills that prepare students for jobs of the future, this alliance is changing lives and building a foundation for innovation in our region. I am excited for what the future holds as we move forward with partners and friends to advance this work.”

Since its founding in 2011, the KC STEM Alliance has helped scale best practice STEM education programs including FIRST Robotics and Project Lead The Way and has cultivated the region’s STEM learning ecosystem known as STEM Connect-KC.

Barbercheck looks forward to continuing the organization’s work to bridge societal gaps in STEM education, she said. That includes, among other things, increasing a sense of inclusion and belonging in programming through intentional, focused recruiting of mentors and volunteers.

“Coming from rural America I have been fortunate to have mentors along my own path to look up to,” Barbercheck said. “They have picked me up, patted my back, opened doors, welcomed me into their networks, and asked me ‘Why not?’ That is who I want to be when I grow up; that is who I want to be for the students of Kansas City — because all students need to know they have a place in STEM.”

Dr. Kevin Truman, dean of the School of Science and Engineering at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, said the KC STEM Alliance, which is an independently operated program housed at the university, will benefit from Barbercheck’s leadership.

“Dr. Barbercheck’s experiences in the biosciences and in strategic leadership of alliances connected with higher education and workforce initiatives will be a great asset,” Truman said. “I am confident the Alliance will continue to be seen as a leader in STEM-based education, recruitment, outreach and civic engagement.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2024 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        LaunchCode

        LaunchCode wins MIT Innovation challenge, $150K award

        By Tommy Felts | October 17, 2017

        LaunchCode, a nonprofit that bolsters the tech workforces in St. Louis and Kansas City by offering free but rigorous coding courses, was recently recognized for its innovative approach to reinventing the future of work. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology announced that LaunchCode is a grand prize winner of its 2017 Inclusive Innovation Challenge, awarding the…

        KC entrepreneurial educator: ‘Zip code shouldn’t determine success’

        By Tommy Felts | October 17, 2017

        Entrepreneurship education should begin as early as kindergarten, said Rachel Foster. “The younger my students are, the more creative they are, and the less the world has had time to tell them that it’s ‘not possible’ or ‘you can’t do that,’” said Foster, entrepreneurship teacher at Lee A. Tolbert Community Academy. “If we are able…

        High school student wants to secure a better world for girls in STEM

        By Tommy Felts | September 29, 2017

        In 2015, Ruby Rios — sophomore at Bishop Miege High School at the time — arrived late to the first day of her college-level computer science class at Johnson County Community College. “I got lost, so I walked in late wearing my high school uniform in a room full of 30 college guys,” Rios said.…

        UMKC and Rockhurst HS team up to add entrepreneurial thinking to curriculum

        By Tommy Felts | September 26, 2017

        Although education innovation continues to grow in Kansas City, there is a visible gap between the “school world” and the “real world,” said Greg Owsley. “The school world and real world shouldn’t be separate entities — they should be connected,” said Owsley, STEAM director at Rockhurst High School. “It’s a very exciting time to be…