Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute held a workshop for Black Families Technology Awareness Day, meant to bridge the gap in representation in the STEM field.
Most kids just play video games. But eight-year-old Malachi Houze designs them.
āI like expressing myself in the game, itās what I do best,ā Houze said.
His mother, Brittney Mitchell, thought all those hours spent in his room were spent just playing games with his friends.
She was surprised to know her son was the brains behind the project.
āWho knows in 10 to 15 years what he will be making you know,ā Mitchell said. āHe might work for Google. Itās really cool to me to see it.ā
Malachiās interest in tech and science goes back years to when his mother bought him his first science kits
Through experiments and tests, he has now found a potential job one day, an engineer.
To learn more about the field, Britteny signed Malachi up for the Rensselaer Polytechnic Instituteās Black Families Technology Awareness day.
The event is designed to help get more Black families, and more specifically children, interested in science, technology and math and address job disparities in those fields.
āIt gives hope to these kids that I can be a doctor, or architect one day, and it really doesnāt matter what neighborhood I live in,ā Mitchell said. āItās really good, it teaches them a lot.ā
While this year the event is virtual, the fun doesnāt stop for the participants.
Kicking off the day was Kat Lopez, who did a presentation titled the Nose Knows, teaching kids about the sensory skills the nose has and how it works.
āEven though itās very hard to do remotely, I just love interacting with the kids, teaching something new,ā Lopez said. āHopefully itās something that sticks with them and they take the further with them to high school, college and hopefully their careers.ā
Interested in science from a young age, Lopez says her goal is to make the field fun for the next generation
And as a woman in STEM, she hopes to continue to inspire underrepresented groups to enter the field.
āShowing them that someone like me or the other presenter can do it, and seeing that people underrepresented in these areas can do what other people in this country can do is a great step in the right direction,ā Lopez said.
Knowing there are kids like Malachi on the other end of the screen is motivating for Lopez, as she knows the next generation is in good hands.
āI think heās going to go far,ā Lopez said. āThese kids, they think outside the box. If he keeps doing that, hopefully he can save some lives, or create some kind of innovation that can change the world.ā
And for Brittney, sheās a proud mother watching her son grow.
āThey wouldnāt have ever had those dreams if it wasnāt for this program,ā Mitchell said. āGoing to see scientists and other things like that. So itās really rewarding to know that they have really good dreams in life and donāt just want to sit around and be on the TV all day.ā