Engineering for Kids was recently featured on KBAY Radio's "South Bay Sunday".
The interview featured EFK San Francisco Director Mala Utamsing, and discusses ‘Introduce A Girl To Engineering Day,’ the benefits of engineering and science education in the Bay Area, what Engineering For Kids does, summer camp plans and the organization’s role in developing children’s learning and interest level in the sciences.
Listen to the radio broadcast by clicking HERE or by listening below:
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Engineering for Kids Featured on CNNMoney.com

Click HERE for the full article or begin reading below:
Executive by day, entrepreneur by night
These seven moonlighters are pursuing big professional careers -- and their entrepreneurial dreams.
Intel engineer turned franchisee
Name: Shu-Ling Garver
Day job: Engineering manager with Intel
Side business: Engineering for Kids franchisee
Shu-Ling Garver has made it her mission at Intel to mentor women in the industry and get young kids, especially girls, excited about engineering.
Friday, March 8, 2013
U.S. News and World Report's Top Engineering Schools of 2012
U.S. News and World Report have released their rankings for the nation's top engineering graduate schools. MIT in Cambridge, MA tops the list. Second place went to Stanford University, followed by University of California - Berkeley in third. The rankings are based on several factors including average GRE quantitative scores, research expenditures per faculty member, and overall acceptance rate.
The top 10 are as follows:
1. MIT (Cambridge, MA)
2. Stanford University (Stanford, CA)
3. University of California -- Berkeley (Berkeley, CA)
4. Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta, GA)
5. California Institute of Technology (Pasadena, CA)
6. University of Illinois -- Champaign/Urbana (Urbana, IL)
7. Carnegie Melon University (Pittsburgh, PA)
8. University of Michigan -- Ann Arbor (Ann Arbor, MI)
9. Cornell University (Ithaca, NY)
10. Purdue University -- West Lafayette (West Lafayette, IN)
To see the entire list of rankings, click HERE!
The top 10 are as follows:
1. MIT (Cambridge, MA)
2. Stanford University (Stanford, CA)
3. University of California -- Berkeley (Berkeley, CA)
4. Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta, GA)
5. California Institute of Technology (Pasadena, CA)
6. University of Illinois -- Champaign/Urbana (Urbana, IL)
7. Carnegie Melon University (Pittsburgh, PA)
8. University of Michigan -- Ann Arbor (Ann Arbor, MI)
9. Cornell University (Ithaca, NY)
10. Purdue University -- West Lafayette (West Lafayette, IN)
To see the entire list of rankings, click HERE!
Friday, March 1, 2013
Ready to Rock-et!
Engineering for Kids has just launched a new contest in which kids (and kids at heart) are asked to channel their inner engineers to create a model rocket that's out of this world! The competition is called "Ready to Rocket" and will be taking photo submissions through the month of March.
Each entrant will receive an EFK t-shirt and their photos will be posted on the EFK Facebook page for a three-week voting process. The entry with the top votes will win its engineer a LEGO Mindstorms NXT 2.0, a computer programmable robot that transforms into 4 different modules.
The contest comes at the perfect time of year, when students on Spring Break will have an amazing project to work on and a prize to work towards. We're very excited to see what our fans come up with.
To LIKE the Facebook page and enter the contest, click HERE and be sure to share the news with the young engineers in your life.
Each entrant will receive an EFK t-shirt and their photos will be posted on the EFK Facebook page for a three-week voting process. The entry with the top votes will win its engineer a LEGO Mindstorms NXT 2.0, a computer programmable robot that transforms into 4 different modules.
The contest comes at the perfect time of year, when students on Spring Break will have an amazing project to work on and a prize to work towards. We're very excited to see what our fans come up with.
To LIKE the Facebook page and enter the contest, click HERE and be sure to share the news with the young engineers in your life.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
February 17th Begins National Engineers Week!

Within the week falls the award for Federal Engineer of the Year, recognizing technical excellence, publications, leadership, and community service. The speaker at this year's awards ceremony will be Dr. Regina M. Benjamin, U.S. Surgeon General. Many of the finalists for this year are in the armed forces, and we salute them all as winners for their service to our country and dedication to the field of engineering.
Thursday is a special spotlight of the week, National Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day. Engineering for Kids founder Dori Roberts was recently interviewed by MarieClaire.com on the future of women in engineering. To read that article, click HERE. We encourage you to introduce a girl to engineering as well! Check out our website to get more information on classes near you at enginerringforkids.net.
Friday, February 8, 2013
Engineering for Kids iPad Sweepstakes
Engineering for Kids recently finished their FREE iPad Sweepstakes which gave away a new iPad Mini to one lucky fan. To enter the contest, one simply had to "Like" EFK's Facebook page and enter their contact information. Then, a winner was drawn at random. The contest ran for several months during the start-up growth of the Engineering for Kids social media presence to match their booming success in the franchise industry!
The Engineering for Kids iPad Sweepstakes winner was Samantha Lautenschlager
from Fredericksburg, VA. As many contest winners are, Samantha was hesitant at first to believe she had actually won, but was thrilled when the EFK team assured her this was no joke! Pictured here are Samantha's two boys and Engineering for Kids founder Dori Roberts with the prize. We can bet a lot of learning is going to be done on their new technology! Perhaps we have some future engineers on our hands.
Check out the Engineering for Kids Facebook page HERE to stay up to date on future contests and giveaways!
Friday, February 1, 2013
High School Students Giving Up on STEM
The U.S. NEWS published an article yesterday that reports high school students are giving up on STEM careers. Though interest has been increasing in the past decade (1 in 4 students report an interest in a STEM major or career) and they begin high school with the interest in engineering and other sciences, it is argued that not enough is being done to maintain an interest in STEM.
A suggestion to remedy the situation is to improve student achievement by implementing new k-12 education standards in science in math and to fill them with an interest in STEM before high school. Some states have begun specialized STEM high schools, but it is also suggested that schools must partner with other educators and businesses in the STEM fields. Otherwise, the increasing jobs in the field will continue to go unfilled.
And that's exactly what Engineering for Kids is trying to do: create an interest early and maintain it through the future.
Being reading the U.S. NEWS article below or click HERE.
A suggestion to remedy the situation is to improve student achievement by implementing new k-12 education standards in science in math and to fill them with an interest in STEM before high school. Some states have begun specialized STEM high schools, but it is also suggested that schools must partner with other educators and businesses in the STEM fields. Otherwise, the increasing jobs in the field will continue to go unfilled.
And that's exactly what Engineering for Kids is trying to do: create an interest early and maintain it through the future.
Being reading the U.S. NEWS article below or click HERE.
Many High Schoolers Giving Up on STEM
High school students aren't sticking with STEM. Even though the number of jobs in science and engineering is expected to surge in the years to come, close to 60 percent of the nation's students who begin high school interested in science, technology, engineering, and math, or STEM, change their minds by graduation, according to a report released Wednesday from STEMconnector and college planning service My College Options.
Overall student interest has been gradually climbing for about a decade, with about 1 in 4 of all high schoolers excited about pursuing a STEM major or career. But keeping many of those students attracted to such subjects is proving a challenge. "Tying education to the workforce needs is critical to the future of the nation," said STEMconnector CEO Edie Fraser at a town hall event Wednesday announcing the release of the report. Science and engineering careers are expected to grow more than 20 percent by 2018, twice the rate of the overall U.S. labor force.
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