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CAS Magazine: Faculty

Science for All: Michelle Bertke鈥檚 STEM Outreach on the Hilltop and Beyond聽

Michelle Bertke believes that everyone is a 鈥渟cience person,鈥 whether they know it or not. 

鈥淚 love all things science. I love to learn about science, talk about science and demystify science for everyone who says 鈥業鈥檓 not a science person鈥,鈥 said Bertke, a teaching professor in the . 鈥淥kay, maybe you鈥檙e not, but you should be. You live in a world governed by science and you should be aware of it. There鈥檚 no room for 鈥業鈥檓 not a science person.鈥欌

For Bertke, the ability to parse out how the world works through observation and experimentation is thrilling, and sharing that experience with others has been the throughline of her career, from outreach work as a doctoral candidate at Notre Dame to organizing weekly STEM lessons for the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Washington. 

Coordinating Community Outreach

Young girls sit around a table and engage in a science experiment.

Third and fourth-grade students work on a science experiment at the Boys & Girls Club.

When Bertke first arrived on the Hilltop, the chemistry department didn鈥檛 have a dedicated outreach coordinator. While many wonderful programs were organized by both faculty and graduate students, there wasn鈥檛 a way for the community to reach out in collaboration. Bertke happily took on the mantle of outreach coordinator, a role designed to share hands-on science with the wider Washington, DC community. 

Today, Bertke stays busy with various ongoing commitments, including a weekly program at the Boys & Girls Club, a biweekly program with Malcolm X Elementary School and regular on-campus visits to local high school classrooms. Every week, during both the school year and summer, Bertke and a group of Hoyas head up Wisconsin Avenue to the Jelleff Recreation Center, where they lead an hour-long, hands-on program for third and fourth graders. 

鈥淭here鈥檚 a big mix of students at the Boys & Girls Club. Some are very into it and some want to get it done and go back to whatever they鈥檙e doing,鈥 said Bertke. 鈥淭here鈥檚 almost always one kid who always wants to go one step further 鈥 mix all of these things together, asking questions, pushing beyond the exercise. Those are the best moments, when there are students who are really engaged and want to take it one more step.鈥 

In outreach lessons, Bertke says sometimes it鈥檚 the simplest experiments that are the most fun. 

鈥淚f you鈥檙e a science kid, then you鈥檝e probably mixed baking soda and vinegar together a dozen times, but we get to work with kids who may have never done that before,鈥 said Bertke. 鈥淚t鈥檚 awesome because it鈥檚 science, it鈥檚 fun and it鈥檚 a mess, and who doesn鈥檛 love a mess?鈥

For students volunteering with Bertke, the programming gives their inner child an opportunity to come to life. 

鈥淪ome of the kids are ridiculously funny when analyzing the science experiments we perform,鈥 said Hayden Giles (C鈥26). 鈥淓ven though there are complicated elements of our experiments,  the kids not only ask diligent and comedic questions about the purpose of the experiment but often offer alternate experimental designs for future labs.鈥  

Giles, a biochemistry major who is pursuing pre-med coursework, plans to continue volunteering with Bertke and the Boys & Girls Club. 

鈥淲hen working with the Boys & Girls Club, there鈥檚 an enthusiasm in the air that can evaporate as students get older and move into different learning environments,鈥 said Giles. 鈥淚鈥檓 looking forward to working with The Boys and Girls Club in the future because seeing how they approach situations with many unknowns gives me insight into how I want to perform research and experiments in my chemistry labs, with enthusiasm and passion.鈥

Connecting the Classroom and the Lab

A woman in a striped dress stands in front of book shelves and drops an egg from a step ladder in front of a room full of students.

Bertke performs an egg drop, the culmination of a weekly lesson.

Bertke discovered her passion for instruction and outreach as a graduate student. 

鈥淚t didn鈥檛 take more than two years into grad school that I realized I didn鈥檛 want to do research forever,鈥 said Bertke. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see myself staying in the lab setting, but I was part of the outreach group at my graduate school. By the time I was done with my Ph.D., I knew that education was the track that I wanted to pursue.鈥 

At Georgetown, Bertke teaches science courses for non-science majors, including Chemistry of the Human Body and Climate Change in the News. Even if student鈥檚 won鈥檛 pursue research or a career in STEM after they graduate, she believes they should still be equipped with broad scientific knowledge. 

鈥淢any of the students in my classroom will go on to become policymakers, businesspeople and leaders in their respective fields,鈥 said Bertke. 鈥淕iving those students a firm foundation of science knowledge isn鈥檛 just a good idea, it鈥檚 essential for their future success. 

Away from the Hilltop, Bertke continues to find new ways to explore science education. She founded a STEM outreach company, Science Connections, in 2016, that specializes in crafting hands-on activities and demonstrations for libraries and community centers. Often, Bertke finds that the project she develops in Science Connections serve as useful jumping-off points in her weekly lessons at the Boys & Girls Club. 

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of overlap between our outreach work and Science Communications,鈥 said Bertke. 鈥淚f a faculty member or community group needs a quick activity exploring acidity or engineering then I have a library, which I鈥檝e spent years building, of resources that are accessible to all ages.鈥

At the heart of her work, Bertke is passionate about helping others discover the same love for science that she had growing up. 

鈥淚f I can make it easier for someone to understand science then I really want to do that because I鈥檝e already done all the work to understand it myself,鈥 said Bertke. 鈥淚 want to be able to share that work with people and I want to give people the opportunities to learn and grow.鈥

Students interested in teaching with Bertke at the Boys & Girls Club and through other outreach opportunities should reach out directly. Photography by Oxana Ware (C’07, G’09).

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Fall 2024
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