Multicultural Educational
Programs, Inc. is celebrating 25 years of serving children & youth!
(The website is under new construction! Please come back in late December!)
National STEM Day will be held at the Quincie Douglas Library in Tucson, AZ.
Date: Saturday, November 8th
Time: 1:00-4:00 p.m.
Free to attend!
1:00-2:30-Science learn about animal habitats for K-5th grades.
2:30-4:00 p.m.-Middle & high schoolers learn to build a rover and build with straws & connectors.
Please get in touch with us at: mepexecdirector@gmail.com to sign up for the new Leadership & Mentoring Program in partnership with The
Tucson Educational Empowerment for Minorities Program-TEEM by December 1st, 2025.
For: Middle & High school youth
The kickoff program will be on Saturday, December 6, 2025.
(Location to be announced).

Inspiring and empowering underrepresented people to pursue their education in STEM

Impact, Atlanta, Georgia
For the State of Arizona
During October the MEP Team will be throughout Arizona the October 26th -November 1, 2017
- Saturday October 28, 2017, The Executive Director and MEP Board Member Rose Robinson will conduct a workshop at the Arizona Schools Out, Make it Count Conference! School. MEP recently won a bid to serve all 59 Arizona School Districts with The Diversity in STEM in the Box Kits and College & Career Readiness Programs. Please come to meet the MEP team at the conference or make a appointment to meet with Michelle Taylor-Frazier, Cell: 515-339-0879, or the contact us page to attend and learn more about the exhibits offered by the MEP program.
- Monday, October 30th- 7:00 p.m. MEP Advisory Board Meeting in Sierra Vista, AZ the First God in Christ Church located at 100 W. Nelson Dr. Sierra Vista, AZ please call in case the location changes. Cell: 515-339-0879
- We will be planning the Black History month celebration for 2018!
- Tuesday, October 31, After school, The Higher Ground Community Center, The "Contributions of Latinos in STEM" Exhibit will visit with hands-on fun with electrical kits to expand learning how engineer- Jose Hernandez Rolabar utilized electricity to build a sign language glove.