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Why Carver: Breaking down barriers for underrepresented kids could quadruple America’s pool of inventors

What could the future hold for this Carver student? Can we offer her enough opportunity to match her ability? What is society missing by limiting her chances at fulfilling her promise? 

What could the future hold for this Carver student? Can we offer her enough opportunity to match her ability? What is society missing by limiting her chances at fulfilling her promise? 

See the study here: Who Becomes an Inventor in America? The Importance of Exposure to Innovation 

See a good summary of the study by Vox here

Traditional sources of data on innovation — mostly patents — don’t offer any meaningful information on who is doing the inventing, not even including cursory information about the inventor’s age and gender. But by linking patent application data from 1996 through 2014 to federal income tax returns, the team was able to track inventors’ lives from birth through adulthood to understand who is inventing things and where they come from. And by focusing on the geography of innovation, they show that direct exposure to a culture of invention and to role models appears to be playing a key role. 

  • Among affluent families, young kids who perform highly on math tests are much more likely to make successful inventions than low-ability kids. 
  • But this isn't true among low-income families. There, high-scoring and low-scoring kids alike are about equally unlikely to become inventors — suggesting that it isn’t a lack of aptitude that’s holding back poor kids; it’s that aptitude alone isn’t enough.
  • Kids are more likely to grow up to be inventors when they grow up in cities with other inventors, which means where you’re born has a lot to do with whether you’ll innovate.
  • This holds up even when we look into specific categories of invention. If you grow up in a city full of antenna innovators, you are more likely to innovate regarding antennas — suggesting that early life exposure to relevant networks is important. 
  • Fascinatingly, the effect is gender-specific — girls are likely to grow up to be innovators only if their city includes an existing stockpile of female innovators (and similarly, male role models for boys), underscoring the importance of role models and self-image. 

Particularly fascinating: The geographical aspects hold regardless of where you live as an adult. The Boston area has thriving industrial clusters in both information technology and medical devices. But Boston-area patent-holders who grew up in Silicon Valley are very likely to have computer-related patents, whereas those who grew up in Minneapolis where there’s a robust medical device industry are likely to have medical device patents. In other words, it’s not just that people are likely to work in locally thriving industries — the specifics of childhood experience seem to matter.

The moral of the story seems to be that a reasonably large number of children who have the capacity to grow up to be inventors end up not doing so. Through some mix of their parents’ socioeconomic status, the city where they grew up, and oftentimes their gender, they are prevented from obtaining access to the networks that would have facilitated that life choice.

 

Janine Smith honored for her volunteerism at Carver

See the entire article at New Canaan News

Janine Smith honored for her service

By Erin Kayata

2017 Volunteer Recognition Awards Honorees

Hands-On Community Service Award: Jeff Holland, New Canaan Pop-Up Park

Hands-On Hall of Fame: Janine Smith, Carver Foundation of Norwalk

Hands-On Rookie of the Year: Gerald Katz, Family & Children’s Agency

Hands-On MVP: Lissette Caldero, Family ReEntry

Hands-On Inspiration Award: Paul Reinhardt, New Canaan Parent Support Group

Hands-On Unsung Hero: Dale Carbonier, New Canaan Chamber of Commerce

Hands-On Lifetime Achievement: Joyce Gould, Person-to-Person

Outstanding Group: New Canaan YMCA’s Togetherhood Commitee

Team Hall of Fame: Debbie Eagan and Nancy Roath, Future 5

Youth MVP: Logan Diliberto, The Center for Sexual Assault Crisis Counseling & Education Center

Community Champions: C.E.R.T. New Canaan

Board Rising Star: Eden Breed, Pivot Ministries

Board Rookie of the Year: Lindsay Burn Grimes, Family Centers

Board MVP: Emily Warren, Arts for Healing

Board Hall of Fame: Janice Luddy, New Canaan Historical Society

The 15 honorees were chosen by a committee who presented the awards throughout the night. Each volunteer was given a small, glass-encased clock to represent the time they’ve given to their community.

ekayata@hearstmediact.com; @erin_kayata