Ireland – Boeing has opened a mobile Newton Room at the Explorium science centre in Dublin in partnership with Trinity College Dublin (TCD) and non-profit FIRST Scandinavia, delivering aviation-themed STEM workshops to local students through a state-of-the-art mobile classroom equipped with flight simulators and hands-on learning modules.
- The mobile Newton Room offers three weeks of hands-on workshops for local students, featuring flight simulators and mission-planning activities designed to spark interest in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) and highlight career pathways in aviation, technology, and sustainability.
- Aviation-themed lessons challenge students to plan rescue missions, solve engineering problems, and apply mathematics and science in real-world scenarios, delivered with support from educators at Trinity College Dublin and tailored to school groups and public audiences.
- Boeing cited projected demand for 660,000 new pilots and 710,000 maintenance technicians over the next 20 years as the operational context for the initiative, positioning the mobile Newton Room as a practical introduction to aerospace career possibilities.
- The Newton Room program, developed and administered by Norwegian non-profit FIRST Scandinavia, engaged more than 21,000 students worldwide in 2025. The Dublin mobile unit was shipped from its previous deployment in Oslo, Norway. There are now 56 Newton Rooms established worldwide, with the concept having reached more than 600,000 children and young people.
- Boeing has previously collaborated with FIRST Scandinavia on Newton Flight Academy installations, including the opening of the first Newton Flight Academy in China in collaboration with Tsinghua University High School.
Statements
- "Boeing is proud to build upon our long-standing partnership with TCD, inspiring the next generation of Irish engineers and scientists, and contributing to the national conversation on sustainable aviation. With projected demand for 660,000 new pilots and 710,000 maintenance technicians over the next 20 years, the mobile Newton Room is a practical introduction to the possibilities in aerospace," said Jeremy Quin, President, Boeing Ireland.
- "Trinity College Dublin has identified that community education and public engagement in STEM topics is urgently needed for global efforts underpinning environmental sustainability. At Trinity we are focused on the Net-Zero transition and particularly in making aviation sustainable through our research and training of learners," said Professor Stephen Dooley, Trinity College Dublin.
Source: Trinity College Dublin
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