Sarah Peterson
Team Leader
SciCycle
I do think that this question of language, we started with meaningful and we talk about success. the idea of impact, right? I struggle so much with figuring out capacity building, but what's the capacity. And I just feel the language itself gets me tripped up and it needs to be the way in which we tell the story, right? Ultimately you need to have the language to tell the story to do the work. And sometimes I feel the language fails me and we just haven't quite figured out the right language to use to make these things make sense outside of our hearts. That feels so much what I felt like actually driving the other day. I was reflecting after listening to y'all's conversation in Atlanta and I was like, "Wow, what did success really look like? And what would success even look like for us?" I mean, let's just say that every single kid that came to one of these booths now became a scientist. That's not realistic, and that's also not what we're even shooting for, right? We're just trying to get people interested in science and liking it. And in my case, when I really distill what it is, why I'm doing what I'm doing, it's because I want to make Yale be less shitty and certainly even better. And that doesn't necessarily mean make every single kid in Dwight, a doctor or scientist, engineer, but it's more so just enrich their lives and the way that which they should be getting already from having Yale in their backyard. And there's no 200-year plan for how to make things more equitable... At least that I have mapped out or seen mapped out. And that's why I think that I have real difficulty with these metrics of success for do I have to, does it really mean that I did a good job if I hit 100 students versus 1000 students? Do I have to increase their math scores? Do I have to have a pre and post survey to tell them that, "Oh, they have two more science facts in their head now." But there is this gut feeling when you see a kid run up to you and remember you from last time and say, "Oh, what are we doing today?" And I don't think that any of our activities are necessarily going to be these eureka epiphany moments for any kid necessarily, but it's a layering of just more resources and capacity building and what you said as well. They get a chance to play with slime or they get a chance to learn about how their muscles turn a bike, but they also get a chance to be in a nice green space and have access to food and housing security and stuff like that. So I have no idea how to actually put it in the grant, because if you write that in the grant, they're just like, "What is this person saying?" Because also if you try to communicate to that somebody, especially who hasn't done this work, or hasn't put a lot of thought into it necessarily, it's tough to even articulate that in words,