Anonymous ID: 899d49 Aug. 16, 2020, 5:31 a.m. No.10306184   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Here’s what Exelon is doing, they are combining global warming hysteria with STEM careers, brainwashing young girls who they intend to eventually promote right up to the top. BTW the HeForShe program is sponsored and brought to you by… the UN

 

STEM program helping young women enhance their interests

By Mark Zimmaro -

August 11, 2020

Daija Sydnor may one day save the planet.

It may not happen tomorrow, but Sydnor’s interest in biomedical engineering and robotics, along with her passion for improving the Earth’s environment, could someday pay off in a big way for Mother Nature.

 

Sydnor was one of 60 high school students from the Philadelphia area who participated in the STEM Innovation Leadership Academy during the final week of July. Hosted virtually by Exelon Foundation through its commitment to the United Nations HeForShe initiative, the event has become an annual opportunity to help high school girls grow skills in the four major professions that STEM stands for — science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

 

(you can stop reading now, and stop kekking, you get the point)

 

https://southphillyreview.com/2020/08/11/stem-program-helping-young-women-enhance-their-interests/

 

Exelon’s Innovation Leadership Academy Attracts 60 Teen Girls

 

Pepco’s parent company Exelon recently hosted the virtual HeForShe STEM Innovation Leadership Academy, a free, weeklong event for girls ages 16-19 in the D.C. region.

This year’s academy, which attracted 60 girls, focused heavily on the global climate crisis as well as the need for energy efficiency while introducing the next generation of leaders to related STEM careers.

Last week’s event culminated in a digital “Energy Innovation Challenge,” where teams proposed an efficiency product/service and developed a business pitch, virtual tour of Pepco’s Watershed Sustainability Center, leadership panel with Exelon CEO Chris Crane and an Exelon nuclear generations discussion.

“I learned about different careers in energy,” said Claire Linton, a Exelon STEM Academy participant who attends Walt Whitman High School in Bethesda. “I got to build circuits and did a home energy audit where I used different tools like a thermometer to measure hoe insulated my home was and how energy efficient it was.”

https://www.washingtoninformer.com/exelons-innovation-leadership-academy-attracts-60-teen-girls/