Three Latino Student Inventors Celebrated by U.S. Secretary of Education and White House Initiative for Hispanics in Honor of Hispanic Heritage Month
12 October 2024 - 4:02AM
Business Wire
Today three student inventors affiliated with the Lemelson-MIT
Program (LMIT) shared stories of what inspired them to invent with
Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona and employees of the U.S.
Department of Education attending a Hispanic Heritage Month
celebration. The panel discussion, “Spotlight on Latino Student
Innovators & Aspiring STEM Leaders,” was part of a larger event
(“Creando Futuros Brillantes”) sponsored by the White House
Initiative for Hispanics. Secretary Cardona noted, “When we fight
to raise the bar for Latino students, we not only make good on our
nation's promises to ourselves, but we honor the journeys of all of
those who came before us.”
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Representatives of Lemelson-MIT,
Students, Families and Teachers meet with Secretary of Education
Miguel Cardona (center). Photo courtesy of The Lemelson
Foundation)
Elias Escobar Argueta, a high school junior from Calistoga,
California, spoke about his team’s invention, DulceTemperatura, a
patent pending invention designed to help farm workers keep cool
and warm when working outdoors and another device to help cool
firefighters. Also participating were two former Lemelson-MIT
InvenTeam® students: Katia Avila Pinado, from Pomona, California,
holds a patent for her team’s invention Heart and Sole, and Lesly
Rojas, of Salem, Oregon, who’s team developed an adaptive flow rate
cup for people with dysphagia. Avila is pursuing a degree in
Networks and Digital Technology at the University of California
Santa Cruz. Rojas is pursuing a degree in Electrical and Computer
Engineering at Oregon State University.
Dr. Cristina Sáenz, Invention Education Manager with LMIT, also
participated in the celebration and had an opportunity to speak
with Secretary Cardona about the students’ achievements. Sáenz
noted, “We had this incredible opportunity for three young Latino
inventors to amplify their experiences and share their inventions
with members of the U.S. Department of Education. While this
celebration of Hispanic Heritage enabled these three students to
shine, one in four students in the U.S. school system are Latino
who also need access and opportunities to showcase what they bring
to their local and national communities. Si se puede!”
LMIT’s Executive Director, Dr. Stephanie Couch, said “I am
incredibly grateful to these students for sharing their stories of
the power and promise of invention education. I hope that one day
many more young women and people of color will be accessing
invention education programs like ours, including learning how to
protect their good ideas with a patent. These students offer
glimpses into the life changing nature of participation on an
InvenTeam and/or LMIT’s other invention education offerings that
are led by Dr. Sáenz.”
About Lemelson-MIT InvenTeams and Inventing Smart
Solutions:
In 21 years, the InvenTeams initiative has enabled 18 teams of
high school students to earn U.S. patents for their projects. Our
programs are part of deliberate efforts to remedy historic
inequities among inventors, protect intellectual property, and
commercialize creations. We’ve worked with 3,883 students across
296 different teams nationwide. Inventing Smart Solutions is
curriculum designed to teach invention education.
ABOUT THE LEMELSON-MIT PROGRAM
LMIT is a national leader in efforts to prepare the next
generation of inventors and entrepreneurs, focusing on the
expansion of opportunities for people to learn ways inventors find
and solve problems that matter to improve lives. Our commitment to
diversity, equity and inclusion aims to remedy historic inequities
among those who develop inventions, protect their intellectual
property, and commercialize their creations.
The Lemelson-MIT Program at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology was founded in 1994. It is funded by The Lemelson
Foundation and administered by the MIT School of Engineering. For
more information, visit Lemelson.MIT.edu.
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Tracy Jean-Chronberg (617) 501 1749 tracyjc@mit.edu