
May I live on in deeds that benefit others,
and offer the heritage of a good name.

Your donation is tax deductible
501(c)3 non-profit organization
Yellin-Rosemont Foundation
EIN# 86-2470351

In memory of:
STEM Education Access
The STEM Education Access fund seeks partnerships with individuals or groups that sponsor programs with equity initiatives and increase STEM educational opportunities for under-represented populations.

Donate directly to a cause in memory of bob, or...
The Bob Yellin Legacy Fund is now part of the Yellin - Rosemont Foundation,
an endowment fund managed by Margaret Allen; merging the legacies of Bob Yellin, Herman & Gloria Yellin, Henry Rosemont, Jr., Kathleen (Rosemont) Denaro; supporting a variety of excellent initiatives in perpetuity, establishing long-term partnerships. All donations in honor of Bob Yellin will go toward the STEM initiatives in Bob's name unless you specify otherwise.
2025 FOCUS: THE GENDER GAP
We have a long-term financial support commitment with the Partner/s listed below; our aim is to cultivate lasting partnerships and increase support each year as our endowment grows.
Thank you for keeping the legacy of the amazing Bob Yellin alive - the generosity he exhibited during his lifetime will continue for future generations.
Thank you!
Girls Who Code
After School grade: 3-12 Club Initiative
Nature or Nurture? No, It's Bias
From the AAUW website: "Why it Matters" HERE.
The Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) fields will account for some of the fastest growing — and highest paying — jobs of the future. Yet girls and women are still not on par with boys and men in preparing for these fields.
Gender bias in school remains a significant barrier to girls’ progress in STEM. Starting in early childhood, teachers and parents provide explicit and implicit messages that boys and men are “better” at math and science — although there is no evidence for that. Black girls and women and Latinas are even more likely to be dissuaded from pursuing math and science, because they face discrimination and have less access to critical resources, opportunities and role models.
Research shows that there is no inherent difference in math and science capability between girls and boys. It’s also a myth that girls aren’t interested in science: In elementary, middle, and high school, girls and boys take math and science courses in roughly equal numbers, except in engineering and AP computer science, according to the National Science Foundation. One study found that the apparent gender gap in mathematics is smaller in countries with greater gender equality, suggesting that gender differences in math are largely due to cultural and environmental factors, not ability.

