Social Change: STEAM Careers Online Forum

Details

Date: Monday 3rd April, 2023

Access: Register to watch online

Year Level: 8–12

Cost: Free to all schools

This is a careers forum with purpose. Each term, Science Gallery Melbourne will introduce your students to inspiring people who work to solve some of our most pressing global and local challenges that we as a community face.  

Students will hear not only about career journeys and industry connections, but how these professionals work across science, technology, engineering, arts and maths and use a range of transferable skills in the ways they work to make a difference in the world.

In the first forum of 2023, we will focus on transdisciplinary STEAM careers relating to social change. Inspired by the BREAK THE BINARIES exhibition, this forum will celebrate those in our society who are breaking the mold and making our local and global communities a better place for all.

Register for you and your students below to watch the recorded session in class time.


Panellists

Ash Hem is a visual artist, peer worker and facilitator. In all these things they pull from their lived experiences to create things and support others. This includes their queerness, gender, culture, disability and all other bits of their life. They continue to work across the mental health, disability, LGBTQIA+, migrant and refugee, youth, arts and advocacy fields. 

Lisy Kane is a videogames producer and co-founder of Girl Geek Academy. She is currently heading up production initiatives for Kepler Interactive, a new global co-owned publisher as well as advisor and producer for the Kowloon Nights games fund. Previous to this she formed her production career at League of Geeks, a Melbourne independent games studio with her last role being Production Director which saw her shaping the production department and broader team.

My name is Caitlin and I work for Fordham Business Advisors as a senior accountant. I started there as a graduate three years ago, after I completed a Bachelor of Commerce at Melbourne Uni in 2018 and had a year off travelling in 2019. I have just co

Caitlin Little has worked as a Senior Accountant at Fordham Business Advisors for three years after completing a Bachelor of Commerce at the University of Melbourne in 2018. Now a qualified Chartered Accountant, Caitlin worked on secondment for a not-for-profit Aboriginal Corporation in North-West WA for six weeks.

Dr Kyle Turner is from Dubbo in rural New South Wales, Australia, his mother's Wiradjuri country. Kyle founded Pearlii in 2019, a for-profit social enterprise that uses world-first AI technology to scan your teeth for common dental problems. Pearlii’s mission to improve oral health globally by bringing free dental check-ups and free oral health education to the world. Prior to Pearlii, Kyle was a Public Health lecturer at the University of Melbourne, which followed his PhD in Epidemiology from the University of Oxford. Kyle has also published widely on the burden of preventable chronic diseases.

 

Emcee

Jess Vovers is a radically hopeful potter, maker, secret poet, and doctor of biochemical engineering. Terrified by the realities of climate change, Jess focused their doctoral research on bio-based alternatives to fossil fuel solvents in the extraction of pharmaceuticals from plant matter. Beyond research, Jess is a scifi-fantasy dork nerd who is passionate about diversity and creativity in STEM. They seek to explore the plurality of queer, neurodiverse, regenerative futures and how we can enmesh art and science to cultivate them. Jess is also a hair model, avid meditator, tutor, and experienced speaker. They are driven by curiosity, awe and connection, and can often be found settling in with clay in soft coloured lighting, or wandering in the bush near the Birrarung with a thermos of tea searching for mushrooms and fluid dynamic patterns.

Guest Artist

Lauri Pavlovich is an 18 year old multi-media creative whose works aim to provide insight and representation of their lived experiences. Their autism, ADHD and queerness impact their themes and approach to creating. Outside of their own artistic practice they work as a peer support worker and program facilitator. Their passion for their work fuels their creativity across mediums, with a focus on the joy of making over the refinement of the final piece

 

Partners