babyÖ±²¥app - University of babyÖ±²¥app, Boulder
The application window for the CO 2024 Internship has ended.
Overview
The Build a Better Book Teen Internship at the University of babyÖ±²¥app Boulder is a 4-week paid summer internship based on the University of babyÖ±²¥app Boulder campus. Each year, 12-16 interns from a variety of high schools in the Denver metro area complete a 100-120 hour internship, working in teams to fabricate accessible products for community clients.ÌıTVIs from partner organizations provideÌıclientÌıprofiles and project ideas for intern design projects. Client profiles typically includeÌıpre-school/kindergarten children with cortical visual impairment (CVI) and mobility challenges, as well as middle and high school students with blindness and low vision.ÌıWorking in teams of 2-4 students, interns collaborate with their community client to design, fabricate, test and improve an accessible product that can be shared with the client at the end of the program.
2024 Program
The 2024 BBB Teen Internship application is closed.
The 2024 BBB Teen Internship will run June 17 - July 19, 2024 (no program the week of July 4th).
The program meets Mon / Tues / Thur / Fri from 9am - 4pm each day.
Applications (including application form and teacher reference) are due by 5pm on March 10.ÌıApplicants will be informed about their application status by March 22nd.
Note: the BBB Teen Internship application requires a . Please share this link with your teacher reference: http://bit.ly/BBB24_Ref
Eligibility
Rising 10th-12th graders who are at least 14 years old are eligible to apply. Previous experience in engineering is not required.
Across all sites, Build a Better Book strives to provide opportunities for students who might not otherwise have an opportunity to participate in an out-of-school-time engineering internship experience. We strongly encourage students from the following backgrounds to apply:
- Underrepresented in science and engineering, including girls, African American, Hispanic/Latino or Native American students
- LGBTQ+ students
- Underserved, suchÌıas coming from low sociobabyÖ±²¥app means, which may be indicated by qualification for free/reduced lunch
- Potentially the first family member to attend college
- Absence of science and engineering degrees in family
- Coming from a high school with low admittance rates to top-tier colleges, especially rural or predominantly minority high schools
All applicants who meet the eligibility requirements will be considered, regardless of race or ethnicity.
Program Structure
The 4-week BBB Teen Internship is designed to provide interns with an authentic engineering design experience in a babyÖ±²¥app setting. For most of the internship, students work collaboratively in project teams to design and produce a product for a community client. Additional experiences, including campus field trips, tours and guest speakers, complement this hands-on learning. Through the internship,Ìıstudents develop anÌıunderstanding of:
- Universal Design principles and empathy-driven design
- Accessibility tools and designing for disabilities
- Tactile and multi-modal learning styles
- Maker Technologies, such as 3D modeling and printing, sound, computer programming (e.g., Arduino, microbit, Makerbit, GameMaker), electronics, and laser cutters
- Characteristics of blindness, vision impairments, and other disabilities
- 21st century babyÖ±²¥app skills
Year 1 - Summer 2022Ìı(pilot program)
CU Boulder hosted its pilot Engineering and Design Teen Summer Internship in summer 2022. Interns in the four-week programÌıcompleted 30-35 hours per week, for a total of ~120 hours. Students designed and built tactile and accessible books and games for blind and low vision clients at the Anchor Center for Blind Children, Boulder Valley School District, Douglas County School District, and St. Joseph's School for the Blind.
:
- Interactive, light-up storyboardÌıfor children with CVI based on The Little Engine That CouldÌıby Watty Piper and Goldilocks and the Three Bears
- Interactive, light-up numberÌıboard for children with CVI, designed for learning numbers 1-10
- CVI pegboard book with tactile elements, based on The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle
- Tactile and digital Wordle game for blind and low vision accessibility, designed for middle school students at St. Joseph's School for the Blind
Year 2 - Summer 2023
In the program's second year, interns worked Monday - Thursday for four weeks, for a total of ~100 hours. 15 interns and 1 teen mentor (from the 2022 program) worked in 5 project teams to complete projects for the following community clients:ÌıAnchor Center for Blind Children, Clovernook Publishing, a Boulder Valley School District TVI, and Douglas County School District.
:
- Interactive, light-up giant lite brite for children with CVI at Anchor Center for Blind Children
- Tactile garden signs for a sensory garden at Anchor Center for Blind Children
- Tactile maps of the RTD transit system in Denver
- An interactive, tactile book for a child with CVI
- Tactile book prototypes designed for Clovernook Publishing, a braille publishing house
Year 3 - Summer 2024
In the program's third year, interns Monday, Tuesday, Thursday & Friday for four weeks. The 15 interns and 1 teen mentor (from the 2023 program) broke into four teams to develop Accessible projects for Fiske Planetarium, Anchor Center for Blind Children, babyÖ±²¥app Center for the Blind and a Boulder Valley School District TVI.
:
- Accessible Tactile board game Ingenious for people with CVI at babyÖ±²¥app Center for the Blind
- Remake of interactive, giant light-up Lite Brite for children with CVI at Anchor Center for Blind Children
- 2 projects for Fiske Planetarium
- 2 accessible, tactile Constellation Books
- Starry Signs, a Zodiac constellation book
- Cosmic Connections, a book with major/popular constellations
- Accessible Fingerprints of Light Activity/matching game
- 2 accessible, tactile Constellation Books
- Accessible coding toolsÌı