CAMBRIDGE, MA, October 15, 2002 —
The Lemelson-MIT Program, a leading advocate for invention
and innovation among American youth, today launched InvenTeam
Grants, a new initiative to foster inventiveness in high
school students. Three New England high school teams have
been chosen as the inaugural recipients. InvenTeam Grants
provide up to $10,000 to teams — composed of students,
their teachers and an industry mentor — that are formed
to invent something of real benefit to their schools or
local communities.
Teams from Hatfield, MA, Littleton, NH and Bow, NH have
been selected as the first InvenTeam grant recipients, based
on the ingenuity and application of their proposed inventions.
All three teams will be working on ambitious projects that
could make real contributions in the areas of personal safety
and environmental or energy conservation. A total of 59
students and 13 teachers are committed to working on these
invention projects over the next six months.
Interested science and math teachers first submitted applications
for the grants last spring, highlighting their ability to
organize teams of inventive students and successfully implement
a grant at their school. In June, ten semi-finalists were
chosen and asked to submit a final application outlining
a specific team project. The three winning teams all presented
proposals that identify a real-world need or problem, as
well as a practical strategy for developing an invention
to solve that problem.
"The Lemelson-MIT InvenTeam Grants were designed to
foster creative collaboration and innovation among young
people," said Merton Flemings, director of the Lemelson-MIT
Program. "Unlike a science fair or research project,
we're offering an opportunity for them to work with their
peers and teachers to solve a real problem for their community's
benefit. We hope that the non-competitive, team-based approach
of this new program will generate excitement about the inventive
process and enrich the participants'
overall experience."
USING THE WEB
The three grantees will spend the next six months developing
their invention. They are required to provide monthly online
progress reports via the InvenTeam Web site (http://web.mit.edu/invent/www/InvenTeam)
to the Lemelson-MIT Program. The InvenTeam Web site will
also serve as an educational resource to guide each team
through the inventing process, in addition to facilitating
communications between the teams and enabling them to share
ideas and solve problems collaboratively. Each team will
submit a final report to the Lemelson-MIT Program by April
1, 2003, and will be invited to showcase their work at the
Lemelson-MIT Program's annual awards ceremony in in Boston
later that month.
TEACHERS PLAY A CRITICAL ROLE
Teachers fulfill a vital role within the InvenTeam Grants
program æ from applying for the grants and forming
student teams, to guiding and collaborating with their students
throughout the invention process. Teachers serve as supervisors
and members of the teams, and will also monitor fund distribution
for materials, supplies and attendance at a one-day invention
workshop at MIT. In an effort to recognize the important
contribution that teachers make to the success of the InvenTeam
Grants initiative, the Lemelson-MIT Program will also provide
unrestricted teacher stipends for InvenTeam work done as
an extracurricular activity or club.
EXPANDING OUTREACH TO YOUNG PEOPLE
The InvenTeam Grants initiative is a logical evolution of
the Lemelson-MIT Program's annual High School Invention
Apprenticeship, which provided a hands-on learning experience
to one inventive high school student for each of the past
four years. Three regional schools have been awarded InvenTeam
Grants for this initial pilot phase. The Lemelson-MIT Program
plans to expand InvenTeam Grants next year, awarding 10
grants to high schools nationwide in 2003 and potentially
25 grants by the 2004-05 academic year.
ABOUT THE LEMELSON-MIT PROGRAM
Based at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge,
MA, the Lemelson-MIT Program was established in 1994 by
the late independent inventor Jerome H. Lemelson and his
wife, Dorothy. The Program's mission is to raise the stature
of inventors and innovators and to foster invention and
innovation among young people. It accomplishes this by celebrating
inventor/innovator role models through outreach activities
and annual awards, including the world's largest for invention
— the $500,000 Lemelson-MIT Prize. The Lemelson-MIT
Program is funded by the Lemelson Foundation, which supports
other invention initiatives at the Smithsonian's National
Museum of American History, Hampshire College, the National
Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance and the University
of Nevada, Reno. Last fall, the Lemelson-MIT Program and
MIT Press released Inventing Modern America: From the Microwave
to the Mouse (www.inventingmodernamerica.com),
an illustrated book that profiles 35 American inventors
who helped shape the modern world. For more information
about the Lemelson-MIT Program and InvenTeam Grants, please
visit its Web site at http://web.mit.edu/invent.
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