PKG Fellow, Yamilée Toussaint featured by CNN Heroes!

Yamilée Toussaint was a PKG Fellow and founded STEM From Dance.

Yamilée Toussaint has always been passionate about two seemingly unrelated things: dancing and mathematics.

Growing up on Long Island in New York, as she pursued her diverse interests, she always had the support of her father, a mechanical engineer, and mother, a nurse.

“I think my parents’ careers in the STEM fields made it so that I always believed that I could also do something in STEM,” Toussaint said.

STEM From Dance participant Myrtha Plaisime, right, uses coding to program circuits. | CNN

While she had a love for math, the dance studio was her “home away from home,” she said.

“It’s always been a source of community, perseverance, and learning how to be determined.”

This dual passion led Toussaint to study mechanical engineering at MIT, where she was also head of the dance team. It was there she saw for the first time that Black women were not pursuing education in STEM – an acronym for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. She was one of only two Black women in her major, an experience that highlighted the need for greater diversity in these career fields.

“What struck me the most is I didn’t feel like I was so exceptional that I should be one of two,” Toussaint said. “I felt like it should be different and can be different.”

Bringing STEM and dance together

While teaching math at a high school in eastern Brooklyn in 2008, Toussaint encountered many students who had negative views of math. This spurred her desire to find a way to change young people’s mindset, especially for girls of color, and empower them to embrace STEM.

“I just started to wonder about a world where the benefits that you get from dance can lead to the outcomes that we’re looking for in STEM,” Toussaint said.

In 2012, she created STEM From Dance, a nonprofit program that integrates dance with STEM education to make these subjects more engaging and accessible. Today, the program works with girls of color ages 8 to 18 in nine cities across the US and is free to its participants.

The organization’s school and summer programs typically attract girls who identify as dancers but are hesitant about STEM. Through the supportive community and hands-on projects, the girls begin to see themselves as programmers, engineers, and innovators.

“Through dance, we’re able to create this atmosphere that feels comfortable,” Toussaint said. “And with that space, we’re able to introduce something that feels kind of intimidating.”

Read on CNN


Tags: PKG Alumni, PKG Fellowships, Tech for Good


« All Posts