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Future-focused education, through invention

Connie Liu ’16

When Connie Liu ’16 took 2.009, MIT’s legendary product engineering processes class, she had an epiphany: so much of her education up to that point seemed to be about finding the solutions to problems that had already been largely solved, rather than trying to tackle problems we don’t yet have a solution for.

“Mechanical engineering showed me what learning could be like,” says Liu, who chose Course 2 because she’d wanted to develop devices to improve people’s lives. “I decided I wanted to go into education and help make learning more focused on solving real-world problems.”

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After graduation, Liu taught at the Nueva School, a private high school in San Mateo, California, that emphasizes hands-on learning, and spent much of her time in its innovation lab. She realized that these valuable maker spaces and hands-on lab experiences need to be more accessible to students everywhere. So she left her teaching job to start Project Invent, a nonprofit organization that helps a team of students and a mentor—a teacher, a community member, or a mature upper-level student—collaborate with a local partner to help solve a problem in the community. Currently, 12 teams from eight states are participating in the program, which ends with a demo day in Silicon Valley where students pitch their concept and a basic prototype to a group of investors and tech leaders.

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One of the big focuses, says Liu, is accessibility, especially for underrepresented minorities. “Four of the teams this year are all female, and one is a team of teenage mothers,” she says. “They’re interviewing peers who have given birth and researching what challenges they face and then designing a technology to address that.”

Liu says that by positioning engineering as a way you can make a social impact, the program is reaching a lot of engineering beginners. “We’re getting a lot of different kids than those who are, for example, applying for robotics teams,” she says.

Watching the program grow is rewarding for Liu, who hopes to expand more each year by keeping current schools engaged and starting new teams annually. But for her, that’s just the beginning.

“The main vision is really about how to redesign high schools to be places where students are empowered and show them that they can make a difference,” she says. “Education doesn’t have to be all about bubbling in answers. There are ways we can design it to actually be preparing our students for the future of work, to show them that they are able to create a unique impact on the world.”

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