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  • 8 months ago
• 👩‍🚀✨ When my 8-year-old niece Marla asked me, “Can girls be astronauts?” — I knew the answer had to be bigger than just “yes.”

👩‍🔬If that’s truly what she wants — right alongside piano, swimming, and dance — she’ll need more than talent and ambition. She’ll need encouragement to explore the building blocks of science, technology, engineering and math – we can also add economics in there as well.

🌍And here’s the reality: in Canada, women are still underrepresented in STEM, and Black women even more so. At the same time, Ontario is facing a serious labour shortage over the next 20 years, especially in highly skilled fields.

✨The opportunities are there.
✨The demand is there.
The time is now for parents, teachers, and mentors to take focused action.

. 🚀 “Our girls need role models, resources, and real opportunities to experiment and see themselves as scientists, engineers, innovators, and economists. They should be asking ‘How can I become an astronaut, and what do I need to do?’ — not questioning whether it’s possible.”
✨ Ready to spark your daughter’s curiosity in STEM? ✨

👩‍🔬🚀Ages 8–11 are the perfect years to plant seeds before high school.

👉 Use this checklist as a guide to keep you on track

🚀 “With the right role models and resources, our girls can see themselves as scientists, engineers, innovators.

💡What’s your STEM plan for your daughter this year?

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Learning
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