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Durham middle schoolers get up and dance with Duke students members of DefMo. Photo by Jared Lazarus/University Communications and Marketing.

For a Day, Middle Schoolers Become Duke Students

School Days event brings 300 Durham students to campus to get a taste of the college experience

Over those years, Duke has hosted about 7,000 middle schoolers on campus, said David Stein, senior education partnership coordinator with Duke Community Affairs.

Stein said many students don鈥檛 have opportunities to learn about college life outside of School Days. For almost all, it鈥檚 their first time visiting a college campus. The aim of the program is to plant the idea of college in students who currently aren鈥檛 thinking about it.

鈥淭he Durham schools value School Days for what it provides their students, and the students value it as well,鈥 Stein said. 鈥淭heir energy level from the start was amazing.鈥

The support came from many people. Chelsy Amaya Garcia, a School Days alumna, talked about what the program meant to her. Duke alumnus Victor Clifton from Durham鈥檚 Emily K Center shared what students should be doing to prepare for college.  And Pratt professor Sophia Santillan, co-director of the Girls Exploring Math program, encouraged students to develop confidence in their math skills.

Carlos Falcon, human safety patient simulation coordinator, guides eighth graders from Carrington Middle School on hands-on learning with the human patient simulator at the Trent Semans Center.
Eighth graders from Carrington Middle School touch open hernia models in the Surgical Education and Activities Laboratory (SEAL) at the Trent Semans Center during Duke-Durham School Days.
Eighth graders from Carrington Middle School touch open hernia models in the Surgical Education and Activities Laboratory (SEAL) at the Trent Semans Center during Duke-Durham School Days.

The bulk of the day involved visits to residence halls where the middle schoolers met with Duke students, and labs and classrooms where faculty and graduate students shared what they found exciting about their research. They took part in a virtual scavenger hunt through the Goosechase app and captured selfies around Duke鈥檚 campus, which was vibrant with fall colors.

Here鈥檚 a little of what the students got to do: View rare and exotic plants in Duke鈥檚 Botany Greenhouses; watch lemurs jump and play; learn statistics with M&Ms; perform CPR on a human patient simulator; and touch open hernia models in Duke鈥檚 Surgical Education and Activities Lab.

School Days requires the assistance of nearly a hundred Duke volunteers, but Stein said faculty and Duke students are always willing to help out either through instruction or leading the middle schoolers on tour.

鈥淭he Duke volunteers are energized as well,鈥 Stein said. 鈥淭hey see students get excited about their research. The volunteer will talk about their data and suddenly middle school students are experiencing something about whale migration patterns or bird migration. Or in some of the high-tech labs, students get to use virtual reality equipment they鈥檝e never been able to use before.鈥

鈥淚 previously worked in the school system so I love working with kids,鈥 said Amber Partin of the Office for Institutional Equity. 鈥淚 enjoy seeing how inspired they get when their brains get going so I am excited about today.鈥

For some, the connection to Duke will continue. School Days attendees, regardless of their ability to pay, are invited to apply to Duke鈥檚 pre-college programs this summer where generous financial support is available. School Days and the summer pre-college program are part of the larger scope of early childhood and college readiness programs supported by Duke Community Affairs as one of its

Students from Lowe鈥檚 Grove Middle School begin their campus tour.
Students from Lowe鈥檚 Grove Middle School begin their campus tour.