
The event was established to spark girls’ interest in science and change the statistics that show women still lag far behind men in the STEM fields. Even though women earn 58 percent of all bachelor’s degrees, only 36 percent of women undergraduates receive STEM degrees. Additionally, women represent only 26 percent of computer and mathematical science occupations and only 13 percent of engineers, according to the National Science Foundation.
This year, the conference was attended by some 750 girls in grades 7 to 10. The students participated in hands-on activities, viewed various STEM exhibits, watched a chemistry show put on by Princeton faculty, and listened to panel discussions from early-career women scientists.
Deedee Ortiz, a program manager in PPPL’s Science Education Department who organized the conference, said the girls’ engagement was evident. “There was a tremendous amount of enthusiasm,” she said. “They loved all of it.”


