Stiles-Nicholson Foundation Gives $85K to Fund ASCEND

by Chelsey Matheson | Tuesday, Jun 24, 2025
Two women and a man stand in the foreground smiling at the camera. One woman is handing another woman a check. They are surrounded by young students in matching purple shirts.

The Stiles-Nicholson Foundation recently gifted $85,000 to 911³Ō¹Ļ’s Stiles-Nicholson Brain Institute (SNBI), providing essential funding to sustain and expand the ASCEND (Advancing STEM-community Engagement through Neuroscience Discovery) initiative – an innovative neuroscience education program focused on engaging middle school students across South Florida.

Launched to ignite interest about the brain and promote STEM career pathways, ASCEND delivers immersive, hands-on neuroscience learning experiences during a critical time in a student’s development. Through classroom visits, field trips to the SNBI, traveling neuroscience vans, and interactive lessons led by 911³Ō¹Ļ scientists, ASCEND makes cutting-edge brain research accessible, exciting, and relevant for early adolescents, especially those in under-resourced schools.

Ā ā€œThe continued support of the Stiles-Nicholson Foundation helps ensure that we can keep ASCEND moving forward - reaching new students, expanding to additional schools, and deepening our impact in communities across the region,ā€ said Nicole Baganz, Ph.D., director of ASCEND and community engagement and programming at the SNBI. Ā ā€œTogether, we’re shaping the next generation of brain scientists.ā€

With philanthropic backing, ASCEND has grown rapidly – expanding from a local pilot program into a county-wide initiative that has reached more than 10,000 students to date. The Foundation’s most recent gift will help support the critical personnel and educational tools that drive ASCEND’s programming year-round. This includes classroom visits, field trips to SNBI, neuroscience summer camps, and a suite of multimedia educational content – all designed and delivered by graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and faculty. to show how basic brain research connects to the real world.

ā€œScientific discovery is impossible without community engagement,ā€ said Randy Blakely, Ph.D., executive director of the SNBI and the David J.S. Nicholson Distinguished Professor in Neuroscience. ā€œASCEND is helping to ensure that the next generation understands the importance of brain science and is equipped, and inspired, to carry it forward.ā€

ASCEND depends on community support and philanthropy to continue growing and reaching students throughout our region. To learn how you can support ASCEND, visit .

A woman stands beside another woman and man, both seated, in front of a screen with a neuron microscope image. All are smiling at the camera.

Kate Arrizza, executive director of the Stiles-Nicholson Foundation, with Nicole Baganz, Ph.D., director of ASCEND and community engagement and programming, and Randy D. Blakely, executive director, both at the Stiles-Nicholson Brain Institute.