Harvard Ed Portal program offers fun, skill-building activities for local students
Brigid O’Rourke
Harvard Correspondent
3 min read
They whipped up salsa while learning the science of cooking, repaired bicycles to enhance sustainability, programmed robots, penned their own poems, played soccer, and exercised critical thinking skills by evaluating arguments. For the fourth year, Harvard’s Summer Explorations series helped some 100 local students in grades 1-10 stay engaged and sharp over the school break as they picked up new skills in free weeklong workshops at the Ed Portal in Allston.
Budding poets: Luke Scanlon (from left), Kieran Bligh, Aiden Kiley, and Kaio Marques. Kaio stands at the blackboard by teacher Michaella Chung.
Photos by Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
Students in grades six to eight repair and recycle bicycles through the Hands-on Sustainability workshop. Here Nicolas Bautista replaces a tire with Gamal Smith of CommonWheels.org of Allston, a nonprofit bicycle cooperative.
Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
Oskar Monahan learns the ABC’s of bicycle repair; Patrick Herber keenly observes the handiwork of Adi Philson of CommonWheels.
Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
Sara Berndt (standing) guides students John Henry (from left), Kelsey Henry, and Sara Dechantsreiter in the 3D printing program.
Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Oskar Monahan (left) and Eva Lynch are enthralled by 3D printing; a student in a critical thinking course ponders an exercise.
Photos by Stephanie Mitchell (left) and Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographers
Marion Mosman, reflected in Claragh Scanlon’s laptop screen, is assisted by instructor Sharon Jason; Nathan Hill seems mesmerized by the robot he has programmed to draw with his iPad.
Photos by Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer
Abigail Hill, 13, of Brighton shows off her soccer moves in Harvard Stadium. Libby Cartagena (center) tours the Harvard Museum of Natural History.
Photos by Rose Lincoln (left) and Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographers
Addison Rich (left) and Olivia Pappas explore some of the wonders at the Harvard Museum of Natural History.
Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Students chop parsley, part of their special salsa recipe, during the Science of Cooking program.
Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Ed Kohl (center) learns a helping of science, math, recipe-reading, nutrition, and more in the cooking workshop.
Business leader Joseph Y. Bae ’94 and novelist Janice Y. K. Lee ’94 expand upon three decades of supporting academic excellence, opportunity at Harvard
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Itaque in rebus minime obscuris non multus est apud eos disserendi labor. Ex ea difficultate illae fallaciloquae, ut ait Accius, malitiae natae…
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quod cum dixissent, ille contra. Non quaeritur autem quid naturae tuae consentaneum sit, sed quid disciplinae. Cuius similitudine perspecta in formarum specie…