The Clavius Project at SLUH Announces New Partnership with 茄子视频
Maggie Rotermund
Senior Media Relations Specialist
maggie.rotermund@slu.edu
314-977-8018
Reserved for members of the media.
05/09/2022
ST. LOUIS 鈥 The Clavius Project announced a new partnership with 茄子视频 (SLU) made possible by a $612,000 grant from the Thomas R. Schilli Foundation (TRSF) to 茄子视频. The grant will bring robotics and STEM enrichment programming into underserved schools across St. Louis through a partnership with SLU and its Ignatian Service Minor.
The announcement was made on April 30 at St. Louis University High (SLUH) at the 8th Annual Clavius Project Robotics Jamboree, which included students from 28 schools throughout the region.
The new partnership will greatly enhance the Clavius Project, bringing additional resources, STEM programming, and tutoring into underserved middle schools. SLU students participating in the Ignatian Service Learning minor that will launch in Fall 2022 will contribute weekly volunteer service hours to implement the Clavius Project in schools.
鈥淐lavius was created by students for students and has provided a diverse set of students exposure to robotics, coding, and STEM programming,鈥 said Jeff Pitts, volunteer director of The Clavius Project and former Anheuser-Busch engineer. 鈥淭his partnership and grant will sustain the program and provide opportunities to so many more students who wouldn鈥檛 otherwise have access to them.鈥
Started at SLUH in 2014, the Clavius Project is a collaboration between students, faculty, and staff to bring STEM education to urban St. Louis middle and elementary schools. Through the afterschool Clavius Project, middle school students learn robotics, coding, and 3D printing. At the Jamboree, students showcased their capstone robotics project and participated in robotics skills competitions at SLUH.
鈥淎 group of SLUH students started the Clavius Project as a way to serve fellow students in the St. Louis community,鈥 said Alan Carruthers, President of SLUH. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very exciting to see what started as a grassroots program blossom and provide more STEM exposure opportunities to a broad spectrum of students in our region.鈥
The Ignatian Service Minor is a new cross-disciplinary minor that SLU will offer students starting in the fall semester of 2022. The service minor will focus on project-based, service-learning that challenges students to help support underserved areas in their community while fostering a lifelong commitment to service. As many as 300 SLU students will participate in the fall.
鈥淪ervice is central to SLU鈥檚 mission,鈥 said Randall Rosenberg, Ph.D., dean of SLU鈥檚 College of Philosophy and Letters and the administrator of the TRSF grant. 鈥淭he Ignatian Service Minor is born out of students鈥 desire to serve their community by enacting the Jesuit mission. The grant from the Schilli Foundation will provide incredible learning opportunities for both SLU students and underserved students in our region.鈥
Ten middle schools that serve students from disadvantaged backgrounds will participate in the pilot year. Each school has participated in Clavius programming in the past and will receive additional resources and volunteer capacity.
鈥淥ver the past eight years, the Clavius Project has provided an incredible enrichment opportunity for our students,鈥 said Dr. Eric Clark, president of Loyola Academy, one of the schools participating in the pilot. 鈥淭his grant and partnership with SLU will expand the opportunities our students have access to.鈥
St. Louis University High School, founded in 1818, is a private, Jesuit secondary educational institution located in the city of St. Louis. The school provides need-blind admission and a premier education infused with the five-century-old tradition and philosophy of St. Ignatius of Loyola, Founder of the Society of Jesus.
The Thomas R. Schilli Foundation was founded in 2021 to support local Jesuit schools and their partners in providing collaborative, integrated, and coordinated educational opportunities for disadvantaged children in the St. Louis region.