Student-Led Nonprofit Seeks to Build AI Literacy in Schools
Three Olin students鈥擜nna Du 鈥28, Ramzey Burdette 鈥28, and Yunzhu Chen 鈥28鈥攈ave founded a nonprofit called that seeks to empower students in underserved communities to better understand the real-world uses of artificial intelligence (AI).
Anna Du 鈥28, Ramzey Burdette 鈥28, and Yunzhu Chen 鈥28 stand with their banner for their nonprofit, Ideas Become Impact. They launched the nonprofit earlier this year with two public events, one at the Brockton Public Library and the other at the Waltham Boys & Girls Club.
Photo credit: Serene Luo 鈥29
鈥淭he pace of AI development has been growing astronomically over the past few years,鈥 says Du. 鈥淚f school computer science curricula in communities with plenty of resources are barely keeping up, how are underserved communities supposed to handle this rapid growth? We created Ideas Become Impact to let students explore what it鈥檚 like to be interested in computer science and AI in a space that鈥檚 free of judgment and up to date with current trends.鈥
鈥淕rowing up in an underprivileged area, I didn鈥檛 realize until late into my high school career that I really liked computer science,鈥 says Burdette. 鈥淚f I had been given the opportunity to do this kind of work, I would have gotten into it much earlier, but I didn鈥檛 have the chance. With Ideas Become Impact, we鈥檙e hoping to give students that chance.鈥
launched earlier this year with two public events, one at the Brockton Public Library and the other at the Waltham Boys & Girls Club. The team conducted interactive activities in which they measured the resting and active heart rates of young people who attended; then, using these data points and an AI model, they predicted each person鈥檚 heart rate while standing still.
Both events provided the Ideas Become Impact team opportunities to fine-tune their approach.
鈥淭he kids were really engaged with the photodiode we used to measure the heart rates,鈥 says Chen. 鈥淥nce they got interested, they would spend longer at the table.鈥
鈥淲e also learned that a lot of people get lost in technical terminology,鈥 says Burdette. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard for people to stay engaged when they don鈥檛 understand, so we have gotten helpful advice from people about making sure we use layman鈥檚 terms.鈥
At Olin, we are learning how to turn the technical skills we are building into ideas that people can use and benefit from.
We want to inspire high school students who also have a cool idea and mentor them through how AI can be used to help them.鈥
Yunzhu Chen 鈥28
Ideas Become Impact Co-Founder
Since its inception, Ideas Become Impact has benefitted from support and advice from members of the Olin community on everything from how to fundraise for a nonprofit to how to properly conduct scientific studies. The nonprofit鈥檚 mission also mirrors the project-based learning core of Olin鈥檚 philosophy.
鈥淎t Olin, we are learning how to turn the technical skills we are building into ideas that people can use and benefit from,鈥 says Chen. 鈥淲e want to inspire high school students who also have a cool idea and mentor them through how AI can be used to help them.鈥
Ideas Become Impact hopes to continue staging individual events with community partners, but their goal is to expand into multi-week programs for middle and high school students.
鈥淭hese AI engagement events have been great to pique interest, but we鈥檇 love to create more robust projects in which a group of students helps guide the topic,鈥 says Du. 鈥淲e could help them use AI to implement a food drive matching program or something in public health, like identifying tumors. Anything they think might fill a need in their community.鈥
Even longer-term, Ideas Become Impact hopes to create a replicable model that could help start self-sufficient club chapters at multiple schools and organizations.
鈥淭his has been an amazing experience connecting what we鈥檝e learned at Olin with community impact, and we鈥檙e excited to keep expanding,鈥 says Du.
If you are interested in collaborating with or supporting , please reach out to them at contact@ideasbecomeimpact.org.
Du, Burdette, and Chen stand with their Ideas Become Impact poster at one of their events.
Photo credit: Serene Luo 鈥29