Jasmine Covell, 18, a first year Natural Sciences undergraduate at King’s College, studied A-levels in biology, chemistry, and maths at college near Middlesbrough. She said: “Oxbridge is not really on people’s radar where I live – most people apply to local universities and commute to save on accommodation costs. I joined the STEM SMART course just thinking it would support me getting good grades, and then I started to realise that I enjoyed doing the work outside the classroom – it really helped challenge me. We were able to submit questions to the Cambridge academics before the tutor sessions, and then in the sessions they would go through it all.
“It definitely helped with catching up on work we’d missed during COVID. I was in Year 9 when the first lockdown happened and we stopped having lessons. We got behind on some of the content, particularly the more advanced stuff, so it was great to get the extra learning through STEM SMART. And visiting Cambridge during the residential stay was the best thing ever – it was seeing the chemistry labs that made me want to apply to Cambridge.”
Samuel Iranloye, 19, a second-year engineering undergraduate at Churchill College, joined STEM SMART’s first cohort while studying for A-levels in maths, further maths, physics and chemistry in south-east London. He said: “I wasn’t certain that I would apply to Cambridge until I visited as part of STEM SMART; I felt more comfortable having had that experience. We spent every day going to the Cavendish Laboratory with 300 other students on the STEM SMART course, which was useful because you’re able to bounce ideas off each other. The extra tuition also helped consolidate the learning in school. It also helped me when it came to preparing for my university admission tests.”
Physics lecturer Prof Lisa Jardine-Wright, OBE, Co-Director of the STEM SMART programme, and Fellow of Churchill College, said: “This is about levelling the playing field and enabling students from educationally disadvantaged and under-represented backgrounds to access Cambridge and other competitive universities. We’re providing top quality support through subject specific tuition and resources, mentoring and encouragement, and getting students from a B to an A, and from an A to an A*
“STEM SMART was created to address the attainment gap that already existed in the UK, and which was then exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. We are helping to bridge that gap through free, weekly tutoring that would otherwise be unaffordable for A-level students from these backgrounds. STEM SMART has the capacity to support every STEM sixth former in every state school for free.”
Professor Bhaskar Vira, Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Education at the University of Cambridge, said: “As well as supporting sixth formers in realising their true potential, and encouraging more applications to top universities from students who might not otherwise apply, STEM SMART is benefitting the UK as a whole – through the boost it is providing for STEM industries and innovation. Cambridge takes its role as a national university seriously, and I’m delighted that STEM SMART is ultimately helping to address the UK’s skills shortage in science, technology, engineering, and maths (STEM) subjects.”
Much of the programme is delivered through the Isaac Physics online platform founded by Prof Jardine-Wright and Prof Mark Warner. STEM SMART and Isaac Physics are free to students, following generous support and funding from the University, colleges, The Ogden Trust, Raspberry Pi and previously the Department for Education. They are also being supported philanthropically, and through donations from alumni.