We have a lot happening, so we are open to volunteers taking on any size effort, be it a couple hours in total to a few hours a week.

Students grades 6-8 dream up their ultimate city of the future by creating a scale model out of recyclables, writing and essay, making a presentation and answering questions. All infrastructure / systems must be explainable using convincing futuristic technology based on the real world today (no magic!). Theme this ye

Next year will be our 36th competition! We pick random materials every year and announce them around Halloween, and then all the teams come together the week before the Super Bowl to see how much weight their bridges can take!
Visit the HOME PAGE for more info!

The list grows daily, but we are on the hook for bringing activities to:
For now, regardless what you want to volunteer for, register with this link:
First we would like to thank The Women's Transportation Seminar. Each year they put on the amazing Transportation You event. Here is the link to their webpage!
Over the past year, our program, and thereby students all across New England, have greatly benefited and have thrived because of an incredibly generous grant from the NCEES. By the end of this summer, the NCEES will be releasing a great article that we will link discussing our work together over the past year. Click here for more from the NCEES
The American Council of Engineering Companies of Massachusetts (ACEC/MA) does a wonderful job letting the professional community know when volunteers are needed, and collecting from the many different sources details about all upcoming activities. Here is their website link!
The website host here, Reed Brockman, would sincerely like to express his thanks to WTS-Boston for selecting him a the 2026 recipient of the Rosa Parks Award. The regular cast of volunteers - you all know who you are - know all the help they have given the BSCES, driving all the way out to Western New England from the Boston area in heavy snow, countlessly rebuilding the BSCES activities on hot weekend afternoons while the wind continually knocks everything over, endlessly assembling models made of cardboard in a field on a rainy afternoon. Reed wants everyone to know that he knows who the true heroes are!
MassHire is the official moniker for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts' workforce boards. The BSCES outreach chair, Reed Brockman, is also the Chair of the Executive Board for MassHire Metro North. While the primary work is the oversight of career centers and programs for in-school and out-of-school youth, they also undertake all sorts of activities by earning grants to even better serve the community. Here is the Metro North MassHIRE link.
While TECET does a ton for the engineering community, their work in fundraising and giving out scholarships is something amazing. Learn more about them here.