"Big Bang Theory" Star Mayim Bialik Encourages High School Girls to Pursue STEM During DeVry University’s National HerWorld® Month

Nationwide events use real-life role models to show young women that careers in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) are realizable

"Big Bang Theory" Star Mayim Bialik and DeVry University Host National HerWorld(R) Month to Inspire High School Girls to Make a Difference through STEM. Photo Credit: JSquared Photography

DOWNERS GROVE, Ill.--()--Mayim Bialik, star of CBS’s “The Big Bang Theory,” will again partner as spokesperson for DeVry University’s National HerWorld® Month, an annual initiative to spark high school girls’ interest in careers in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). Nearly 8 million jobs will be available in STEM-related fields by 2020,1 yet women comprise only 24 percent of the STEM workforce.2 HerWorld helps prepare the next generation of female graduates for these opportunities by introducing them to successful women in STEM careers.

In addition to playing a neuroscientist on “The Big Bang Theory,” Bialik has a personal passion for STEM: she earned a Ph.D. in neuroscience in 2007. “I am partnering with DeVry University to emphasize the value of female role models in providing mentorship to high school girls and showing them that they can succeed in STEM-related careers,” Bialik said. “HerWorld is an exciting way for young women to learn directly from female leaders who persisted through challenges, and to experience the wonder and ‘cool factor’ of STEM through hands-on activities.”

Bialik will speak at the HerWorld event at Gotham Hall in New York City on Friday, March 14.

DeVry University launched HerWorld 17 years ago. Today, and throughout the month, thousands of young women from hundreds of high schools will participate in HerWorld events across the country. Female students will interact with their peers in workshops and confidence-building activities, as well as hear from women leaders in STEM from companies including Microsoft, Google and Cisco.

Contributing to the gender gap in STEM-related fields is a lack of continued interest in these subjects among young women in high school and beyond. More than half of high school freshmen who declare interest in a STEM-related field lose interest by the time they graduate,3 and one-third of women who enter STEM bachelor’s degree programs switch their majors to a non-STEM field.4 National HerWorld Month works to reverse this trend with the help of real-life female role models who can introduce high school girls to rewarding and achievable STEM careers.

HerWorld is an initiative of STEM Ready, a national movement established by DeVry University to introduce more high school students to careers in STEM. For more information, visit www.devry.edu/stemready.

 

National HerWorld Month Event Schedule

 
Date   Location
2/28/14   Phoenix
3/4/14   Chicagoland – Rockford, Ill.
3/6/14   Chicagoland – Schaumburg, Ill.
3/7/14   Fresno, Calif.
3/11/14   Los Angeles
3/13/14   Los Angeles – Colton, Calif.
3/13/14   Chicagoland – Glen Ellyn, Ill.
3/14/14   New York
3/18/14   Atlanta
3/21/14   Fresno – Bakersfield, Calif.
3/26/14   Philadelphia
3/26/14   Columbus, Ohio
3/27 and 3/28/14   Houston
3/28/14   North Brunswick, N.J.
3/28/14   Los Angeles – Long Beach, Calif.
 

About DeVry University

Founded in 1931, DeVry University is one of the largest private-sector universities in North America. The university’s mission is to foster student learning through high-quality, career-oriented education integrating technology, business, science and the arts. With more than 90 locations, DeVry University delivers practitioner-oriented undergraduate and graduate degree programs onsite and online that meet the needs of a diverse and geographically dispersed student population. The university’s five colleges of study—including Business & Management, Engineering & Information Sciences, Health Sciences, Liberal Arts & Sciences, and Media Arts & Technology—employ outstanding faculty members who work in the fields that they teach, providing students with real-world experiences that prepare them for high-growth careers.

DeVry University is institutionally accredited by The Higher Learning Commission and is a member of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, www.ncahlc.org. DeVry University, a part of DeVry Education Group (NYSE: DV), is based in Downers Grove, Ill. For more information about DeVry University, find us on Twitter @DeVryUniv and on Facebook at /DEVRYUNIVERSITY, or visit newsroom.devry.edu.

HerWorld is a registered trademark of DeVry Educational Development Corporation. ©2014 DeVry Educational Development Corporation. All rights reserved. Any other trademarks used herein are owned by their respective owners. 36 USC 220506.

1 Recovery: Job Growth and Education Requirements through 2020. Georgetown Public Policy Institute Center on Education and the Workforce, June 2013. Web. 16 Feb. 2014. <http://www9.georgetown.edu/grad/gppi/hpi/cew/pdfs/Recovery2020.FR.Web.pdf>.
2 Women in STEM: A Gender Gap to Innovation. U.S. Department of Commerce: Economics and Statistics Administration, Aug. 2011. Web. 16 Feb. 2014. <http://www.esa.doc.gov/sites/default/files/reports/documents/womeninstemagaptoinnovation8311.pdf>.
3 Where Are the STEM Students? What Are Their Career Interests? Where Are the STEM Jobs? My College Options and STEMconnector, 2012. Web. 16 Feb. 2014. <http://www.stemconnector.org/sites/default/files/store/STEM-Students-STEM-Jobs-Executive-Summary.pdf>.
4 STEM Attrition: College Students’ Paths Into and Out of STEM Fields. U.S. Department of Education and National Center for Education Statistics, Nov. 2013. Web. 16 Feb. 2014. <http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2014/2014001rev.pdf>.

Contacts

DeVry University
Melanie Wright, 215-591-5909
mwright1@devry.edu
or
MSLGROUP
Susie White, 312-861-5219
susie.white@mslgroup.com

Contacts

DeVry University
Melanie Wright, 215-591-5909
mwright1@devry.edu
or
MSLGROUP
Susie White, 312-861-5219
susie.white@mslgroup.com