ComEd Black History Month Campaign Helps Teens Explore ‘Unexpected’ STEM Careers
‘Solar Spotlight’ Education Program Introduces High School Students to STEM via The Arts
For the fourth year, ComEd’s annual Black History Month campaign provides stimulating seminars to expose African American high
school students to non-traditional and ‘unexpected’ STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) careers. For 2017, Solar
Spotlight will explore STEM via The Arts as students learn about solar energy, African-American trailblazers, and the
earliest forms of STEM via African history. The program will culminate with a 7-foot solar-powered art Installation, designed with
help from the students, which will be on permanent display in the Bronzeville neighborhood.
ComEd enlisted the support of community partners, youth organizations and schools in Chicago and Rockford to select nearly 60
students to participate in the Solar Spotlight seminars on Saturday, February 4 and Saturday, February 11, at the ComEd Training
Center in Chicago. ComEd engineers will be on hand to serve as mentors and students also will have an opportunity to tour the
facility and learn about careers in energy.
Gallery Guichard, Bronzeville’s premier gallery of art, has signed on as a partner to construct the installation. ComEd will
unveil the solar art at a special ceremony for the students, their family, friends and the community in early Spring 2017.
“ComEd is proud to celebrate Black History Month by engaging with local high school students’ to explore STEM through the
emerging worlds of science and art,” said Anne Pramaggiore, President and CEO of ComEd. “As an innovation and technology company,
we are committed to offering youth-based STEM programs throughout the year to empower the workforce of the future. All of these
programs include aspects to nurture diversity and promote community involvement.”
The ‘Solar Spotlight’ campaign also will highlight activities and student participation in series of billboard, print, and
digital advertisements throughout the month of February. ComEd will award each participating student with a plaque highlighting the
completion of the education seminars and a financial scholarship.
The seminar curriculum introduces renewable energy concepts, features the multiple uses of solar energy while also providing
students with the opportunity to work with directly with experts in solar and STEM fields, including ComEd mentors. There will be a
presentation about the earliest dated pyramid, the 200 feet high step pyramid designed by the royal architect Imhotep, to
illustrate engineering and astronomical significance and prep students for an hands-on activity to design hieroglyphic panels for
the pyramid art Installation.
Members of Exelon African American Resource Alliance (EAARA), who are also ComEd employees, will serve as student mentors for
both education seminars. A member of EAARA will present a Black History themed profile about the women featured in the #1 movie
“Hidden Figures” to highlight African Americans who have excelled in the STEM industry.
ComEd invites the general public to visit ComEd.com/SolarSpotlight to learn more about Solar Spotlight and watch the 2016
student video. The public may also track the students’ Solar Spotlight journey on social media by searching #comedsolarspotlight
and #bhm2017.
Commonwealth Edison Company (ComEd) is a unit of Chicago-based Exelon Corporation (NYSE: EXC), the nation’s leading
competitive energy provider, with approximately 10 million customers. ComEd provides service to approximately 3.8 million customers
across northern Illinois, or 70 percent of the state’s population. For more information visit ComEd.com, and connect with the
company on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.
ComEd Media Relations
312-394-3500
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