Sunday, December 6, 2020

Role Models in STEM Fields

When someone says "science", "technology", "engineering", or "math", what is the picture that pops into your head? Most people would likely answer that they think of a male. When asked to describe that image more, they would likely say that they think of a white male. They may continue with glasses or a lab coat, depending on how detailed they are and which of the four words that they heard. However, there are an abundance of people within the STEM fields from all different backgrounds, ethnicities, genders, sexual orientations, cultures, and beyond. Since students within schools are not only white males, they need to be able to see themselves reflected in STEM fields, so that they know their aspirations are validated and possible. If students can find role models in different STEM fields that they can identify with, they will know that those STEM fields are also possibilities for them to achieve, if that is what they desire. Sometimes, it is hard to find people that fit those qualifications. Since I wanted to start showing my students people they could see as role models, I thought I would also include this information on a blog in the hopes that it would help someone else as well.  This is in no way an exhaustive list, and it does not cover all of the accomplishments that these incredible people have achieved, but this is a good starting place.

Women in STEM fields: 
  • Barbara Askins--She invented the autoradiograph.  The process used in the autoradiograph was used in astronomy, but became more popular when used to enhance X-ray images (Best_Schools, 2020).
  • Ana Caraiani--She was born in Romania and has contributed greatly to the field of mathematics.  She has worked a lot with problems at the interface of the Langlands correspondence with arithmetic algebraic geometry (Best_Schools, 2020).
  • Uma Chowdhry--She was born in India and has contributed to chemistry, engineering, and materials science.  She has worked on ceramics and superconductors, catalysis, proton conductors, microelectronics, and nanotechnology (Best_Schools, 2020).
  • Jennifer A. Doudna--She has done a lot of work with biological chemistry and molecular pharmacology.  She has found a method for gene editing called "CRISPR/Cas9" which has revolutionized gene studies (Best_Schools, 2020).
  • Faiza Mohammed Al-Kharafi--She was born in Kuwait.  She has worked with chemistry, electrochemistry, and technology.  She has been president of Kuwait University, and her scientific work has included corrosion in various technological systems (Best_Schools, 2020).  
  • Mary-Claire King--She has worked with genetics.  Some of her important work has led to advances in breast cancer.  Because of her work, women can learn if they are more likely to deal with breast cancer, and those same techniques have been used to learn about other genetic illnesses (Best_Schools, 2020).
  • Jane X. Luu--She was born in Saigon and fled South Vietnam at the age of 11.  She has done work on astronomy and astrophysics, including the discovery of Kuiper Belt (Best_Schools, 2020).
  • Katia P. Sycara--She was born in Greece.  She has worked in computer science, artificial intelligence, and robotics.  She has done an abundance of work and has authored or co-authored more than 300 papers (Best_Schools, 2020). 
Black individuals in STEM fields: 
  • Mark Dean--He was a computer programmer that worked for IBM.  Of the company's nine original patents, he actually held three of them!  He worked to develop the original home computer and devices that could connect to a PC (iD Tech).
  • Guion Bluford, Jr.--He was the first black man to travel to space.  He was an engineer that took multiple trips to space and worked for NASA (iD Tech).
  • Kimberly Bryant--She was an electrical engineer for years.  She also founded Black Girls Code (iD Tech).
  • Katherine Johnson--She was a mathematician for NASA.  She, along with two other black women Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson, were an integral part of NASA winning the Space Race (iD Tech).
  • Mae Jemison--She was an astronaut that was the first African American woman in space.  She also is a doctor that worked for the Peace Corps (iD Tech).  
  • Vivien Thomas--He was a surgical technician.  He contributed to operation techniques and helped ensure babies that had blue baby syndrome would get enough oxygen in their blood to help them survive.  He also helped create the Blalock-Taussig shunt (iD Tech).
  • Marie M. Daly--She was the first African American woman to get a PhD in chemistry.  She helped to find a connection between high cholesterol and clogged arteries, shining light on the relationship between diet and bodily health (iD Tech).  
  • Kunle Olukotun--He helped create the multi-core processor.  He also founded the Pervasive Parallelism Lab at Stanford, which worked to make creating software for multi-core processors easier (iD Tech).
Asian or Pacific Island individuals in STEM fields: 
  • Liu Yang--She is Chinese.  She became the first female Chinese astronaut in 2012.  She was also a Chinese Air Force Pilot (Jankoski).
  • Robert Tijan--He was born in Hong Kong and works in biochemistry.  He has contributed greatly to gene regulation and expression (Jankoski).
  • Dr. Ted Fujita--He studied tornadoes, among a number of other things he was curious about.  His studies on tornadoes led him to create a six-point rating scale for them, named the Fujita Scale (Public Broadcasting Service).  
  • Jerry Yang--He is Taiwanese-American.  He has done a lot of work with computer programming and the internet.  He was the co-founder of Yahoo! Inc (Public Broadcasting Service).
  • Reshma Saujani--She is of Gujarati Indian descent.  She has a background working with in the legal field, but founded the technology organization Girls Who Code.  She has also written a book with the same name (Public Broadcasting Service).
  • Satya Nadella--He is Indian-American.  Currently, he is the CEO of Microsoft (Public Broadcasting Service).
  • Ellison Onizuka--He was Hawaiian.  He was an engineer and an astronaut for NASA.  He passed away on the Space Shuttle Challenger in a tragic accident at the age of 39 (Public Broadcasting Service).
  • Chien-Shiung Wu--She was Chinese-American.  She worked with experimental physics and is often called the "First Lady of Physics".  She helped with the Manhattan Project and contributed much to nuclear physics (Public Broadcasting Service).  
Latinx individuals in STEM fields: 
  • Arnaldo J. Diaz Vazquez--He has done a lot of research in pharmacology at Perelman School of Medicine.  He has worked with different pieces of technology and how they impact biological systems (Termini).
  • Carolina Barillas-Mury--She has worked with a lot of research on mosquitos.  She has done research on mosquitos and other parasites impact malaria transmission (Termini).
  • Ellen Ochoa--She was the first Hispanic/Latina woman in space as an astronaut.  She is also an engineer and was director of the Johnson Space Center (Termini).
  • Enrique M. De la Cruz--He has done work with molecular biophysics and biochemistry.  His research centers around actin cytoskeleton, molecular motor proteins, and nucleotide signaling enzymes (Termini).
  • Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado--He is a molecular biologist.  He has worked for the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.  He has done a lot of research on how animal regeneration works (Termini).
  • Pamela Padilla--She works for the University of North Texas and teaches classes on genetics and stress physiology.  Her research is centered around how organisms handle environmental stress (Termini).
  • Ricardo Correa--He works at the University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix.  His research has centered are endocrinology, diabetes, and metabolism (Termini).
  • Yarimar Carrasquillo--She currently does a lot of research.  Her research has centered around pathological pain states and what anatomical, molecular, and cellular mechanisms are relevant (Termini).
Native American/Indigenous individuals in STEM fields: 
  • Andrea Delgado-Olsen--She is part of the Ione Band of Miwok Indians. She is a program manager for two companies. She is also the founder of Native American Women in Computing (Valley, 2017). 
  • Dezbah Hatathli--She is a part of the Diné (Navajo).  She studied Anthropology and has held a number of occupations such as archeologist, crime science specialist, and dispatcher for the police, fire, and ambulatory services.  She is now a vehicle operations specialist (Valley, 2017).
  • Jonathon Fisk--He is affiliated with the Taíno.  He has been working to get his PhD in the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management.  He is queer, genderqueer, and disabled (Valley, 2017).
  • Kat Li--She is affiliated with the Anishnaabe.  She has worked at both Quora and Stripe.  She also led a team at Digit, which is an automated savings tool (Valley, 2017).
  • Luke Lightning--He is a part of the Buffalo Point First Nation.  He is a managing partner of LAUNCH, has worked as a researcher for biological technology.  He is involved with a number of multicultural and Native American heritage organizations and events (Valley, 2017).
  • Matthew Yazzie--He is the founder and CEO of a nonprofit that works to gather, organize, and disperse diversity and inclusion data.  He has worked for a number of other socially conscious organizations and technology companies (Valley, 2017).
  • Nicole Archambault--She is affiliated with the Wampanoag/Pokanoket Nation.  She created La Vie en Code, which is a blog, podcast, and online courses to assist others in teaching themselves and switching careers.  She is self-taught (Valley, 2017).
  • Tara Astigarraga--She is a part of the Choctaw Nation in Oklahoma.  She has been a part of IBM for almost two decades and fulfilled multiple roles within the organization.  She also has over 65 patents filed and feels strongly about STEM within schools (Valley, 2017).
LGBTQ+ individuals in STEM fields:
  • Dr. Sally Ride--She was the first American woman in space. She also co-founded Sally Ride Science, which was a non-profit to get more women interested in STEM fields. Sally had a long-term relationship with her partner Tam O'Shaughnessy until Ride's death in 2012 (8 Influential..., 2020). 
  • Alan Turing--He was a mathematician during World War II that was credited with breaking the Nazi Enigma Code. He passed away in 1954 at the age of 41 from suicide because of what many think to be the ramifications of him being outed as gay 2 years previously, which was considered a crime at the time (8 Influential..., 2020). 
  • Jack Andraka--He developed a pancreatic detection tool at the age of 15! He is currently 23 and continuing to create new robotics and technological tools to assist with healthcare. He looked to Alan Turing as a gay role model and hopes to be that for others (8 Influential..., 2020). 
  • Mary Gray--She is the author or co-author of multiple books while working as a Senior Researcher at Microsoft Research. She completes a lot of research on technology and how it impacts the world. She identifies as queer (8 Influential..., 2020). 
  • Jon "Maddog" Hall--He worked as the Department Head of Computer Science at Hartford State Technical College and currently works as the Chairman of the Board for the Linux Professional Institute. He is a programmer and works with all sorts of computers in a variety of ways. He came out as gay in celebration of Alan Turing's 100th birthday (8 Influential..., 2020). 
  • Martin Lo--He is a mathematician who has worked at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory since 1986. He developed the LTool to help determine trajectories for spacecraft (8 Influential..., 2020). 
  • Lynn Conway--She helped create supercomputers and has worked at IBM, Memorex, and Xerox. She was born biologically male, but had gender reassignment surgery (8 Influential..., 2020). 
  • Audrey Tang--She was considered an entrepreneur in Silicon Valley at the age of 19. She is Taiwan's youngest government minister and the first transgender Cabinet member. She was born biologically male and has had gender reassignment surgery (8 Influential..., 2020). 
  • Tim Cook--He is the CEO of Apple and is gay (8 Influential..., 2020). 

References: 

8 Influential LGBTQ+ People in STEM to Celebrate This Pride Month. (2020, June 12). https://www.topcoder.com/8-lgbtq-people-in-stem-to-celebrate-this-pride-month/. 

Best_Schools. (2020, October 29). 50 Top Women in STEM. TheBestSchools.org. https://thebestschools.org/features/50-top-women-in-stem/. 

iD Tech. 16 Black STEM Innovators & Famous Leaders: Engineer Role Models. iD Tech. https://www.idtech.com/blog/black-stem-innovators-who-defined-modern-world. 

Jankoski, T. 5 STEM Leaders your Students Should Know About. https://blog.stemscopes.com/5-stem-leaders-your-students-should-know-about. 

Public Broadcasting Service. AAPI History Spotlight: Saluting STEM Pioneers. PBS. https://www.pbs.org/articles/2020/05/aapi-history-spotlight-saluting-stem-pioneers/. 

Termini, C. 100 inspiring Hispanic/Latinx scientists in America. Home. http://crosstalk.cell.com/blog/100-inspiring-hispanic-latinx-scientists-in-america. 

Valley, W. of S. (2017, November 29). Just 18 Really Awesome Native Folks in STEM. Medium. https://medium.com/women-of-silicon-valley/just-18-awesome-native-folks-in-stem-134211ff14cd.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Journal #44

There are many contemporary movies that are great, and they all show characteristics of Post Modernism. I will write about the Harry Potter movies, because they will all have the same characteristics. There is a lot of fear in all of the movies, because in all of them, Harry, Ron Weasley, and Hermione Granger all run and hide from He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named, otherwise known as Voldemort. Voldemort killed Harry's parents and has terrorized the wizarding world for years since then. Everyone fears him, and Harry was the only one that survived his attacks, making him famous. He still fears Voldemort, because he thinks that Voldemort will be able to kill him this time, and in the meantime, he is trying to destroy all of the pieces of Voldemort's soul that he has split into seven pieces. There is also assimilation, because they are all wizards trying to get by in the wizarding world while still managing to hide from Voldemort. There is also the opposite in effect, because they are still in the world with all of the rest of the humans without magic, which they call Muggles. So they are not the same as all of those people, and they have to hide the fact that they are wizards or witches from everyone else as well. The lack of the individual is shown some, because at points, they all think that there is nothing special about them and that they are just like everyone else. They are teenagers in these movies, trying to figure out who they are, so it makes sense that they sometimes feel inferior or the same as everyone else, without showing who they really are. The opposite is in effect here as well, because at times, they know that they are the only ones that would be able to do what they are doing and that no one else is the same as them. At times they are very individualistic and selfish, and that shows that sometimes they are very sure of themselves. Many characteristics of Post Modernism are in the Harry Potter movies, and here are just a few.

Thursday, April 28, 2011






Porter, Katherine A. "The Jilting of Granny Weatherall." Web. 17 Apr. 2011. .

"Katherine Anne Porter Biography." Famous Poets and Poems - Read and Enjoy Poetry. 2006. Web. 27 Apr. 2011. .

Pound, Ezra. "The River-Merchant's Wife: A Letter." Poets.org. New Directions Publishing Corporation, 1957. Web. 27 Apr. 2011. .

Liukkonen, Petri. "Ezra Pound." Www.kirjasto.sci.fi. 2008. Web. 27 Apr. 2011. .

"The American Novel . Literary Timeline . Movements . Modernism | PBS." PBS: Public Broadcasting Service. Educational Broadcasting Corporation, 2007. Web. 27 Apr. 2011. .

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Journal #43

Today we have to write about John Coltrane's song "Blue Train", which is a jazz song from the Modernism period of writing. This song shows a lot of different feelings and emotions in it through the tempo of the song and the range of notes that they play. In the beginning, the music starts out very slow, and it makes one really get into the music. I can picture the person in a small jazz club, playing their instrument with the drums and the piano in the background. I can see all of the people slowly closing their eyes and swaying along with the music. It quickly picks up speed, and the picture in my mind changes to a picture of people that are in rags for clothing all being together and celebrating something so they are dancing to the music. They are all extremely happy, and the beverages are definitely flowing. They have some people sitting on the side and just watching, but most of the people are dancing in the middle. They are being swung every which way, and their feet are moving at incredible speeds. The music then slows back down, and after a while the piano is the instrument that can be heard the loudest. This makes me feel like I am at an elegant party where the music is there on the side and everyone is socializing and talking to one another with flutes of champagne in their hands. The women are wearing beautiful dresses and the men are dressed in tuxedos. The music then speeds up again, but the piano is still the most easily heard. It is incredible how the transitions from slow to fast come so easily to them, because many people would not be able to make everything sound so smooth. Their group must have practiced this piece quite a bit, because it sounds absolutely perfect. They must have practiced incredibly hard when they were younger, and it definitely paid off.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Realism vs. Modernism

Realism and Modernism are both alike, yet also have many differences. Realism tried to be very realistic about what they were portraying. They wanted things to be seen they way that they were, and they did not try to make anything seem better or worse. Meanwhile, Modernism was often disillusioned, or showed signs of disillusionment. They enjoyed showing how people at the time had believed in so many different things like the government, society, and even their families, that all in the end betrayed them. They showed how there were many things that were happening at that time to cause them to second guess everything that they had believed in their entire lives. Realism, however, did nothing of the sort. They continued to discuss things realistically as they were, and did not try to put hidden meanings or motives behind it. Realism definitely worried more about what was happening here and now. They wanted to talk about what was going on in their lives at that very moment, and they were not really worried about their past or about their future. Modernism was much the same way, because they were more worried about what was happening to them right at that second. Sometimes they may look to the future and try to make some plans, but for the most part they were not really worried about it. They worked very hard to make do with what they had at the present, so they did not necessarily try to think about what they would have to come up with to survive the next few weeks or even days. Modernism involved things that happened at that time, such as the Great Depression, World War I, and the rations that many of them relied on for food daily. Realism was concerned about being in the moment, but they were not worried about it, because they had nothing huge to worry about. They may have had day-to-day worries, but it is a lot less likely that they had huge things to think about like the Modernists did. Realism also had many different aspects that can change the way that we think of it. We can think of it as Regionalism, which is a ton different than normal versions of Realism. Regionalism is nothing like Modernism. Regionalism is all about certain regions of the United States. Regionalism was more boasting about what a certain part of the United States had to offer than it was about different problems that Americans were facing at the moment. Regionalism and Modernism really are not alike at all, and that is just one more way that Realism and Modernism are so different. While both can have many advantages and disadvantages, they are both enjoyed by most people that read them. It is hard to compare the two because they can be so alike, but at the same time, it is possible to tell the difference, because they involve different topics that are both necessary. Realism and Modernism can be alike in many ways, but they also have vast differences that allow us to make them different things.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Job Shadowing

I job shadowed a teacher named Mrs. Petit from A-C Central. She taught a class of first graders that were really fun. There were only fourteen of them, but that made the day a lot easier, because I had less names that I needed to learn. The children were adorable, and very fun to be around. Some of the day was mildly boring, because I just had to sit there and listen. While I know that is what I am supposed to do, I would have loved to have been able to actually take part in helping to teach the children. I got to see them do many different things, such as music, physical education, computers, and library. It was fun to watch them all do many different things, and it helped give me a better feel for the different areas of teaching. I also got to see different reading levels, and that also helped me to realize that the children are not all at the same level. One of the young girls was a fantastic reader, but she had a hard time paying attention, so she ended up being put in the slow reading group because her mom requested it. This all helped me realize that teaching can be complicated, and working with parents on different topics is just as important as working with the children. I will need to be organized and engaging, and that will make everything go a lot more smoothly. I can definitely see myself teaching, and this experience only added to the knowledge that I am trying to gain to get there.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Journal #42

There is a lot of controversy over who people prefer to read, Walt Whitman or Emily Dickinson. Personally I would prefer to read Emily Dickinson, because she makes a lot more sense to me than Walt Whitman does. Walt Whitman was a very complicated poet, and he made every poem that he wrote have multiple meanings. Personally I prefer to sometimes have poems that I can take at face value and that are very literal, so it is a lot better for me to read Emily Dickinson. I prefer to read some of the complicated poems every once in a while, but quite often I prefer to read the poems that are simple and easy to follow. Walt Whitman tried to talk about very complex things in every single poem that he wrote, because he tried to write about Self, the every man, God, Christianity, or America in every single poem that he ever wrote. It may not have always been about all of those things, but almost every time he writes about more than one of those themes. He also writes things in a very complicated way that is quite often very hard to follow. He is very egotistical in his poems, because he says everything is him and about him and he is God and everyone else is God as well, and I do not agree with that. I do not like Whitman from what I have seen from him, and he kind of makes me mad. I much prefer Emily Dickinson, because she is a lot more simple with what she is trying to say. It is also easier, because even if she is trying to be complex, she is still a lot easier to understand than Whitman ever was. Whitman and Dickinson were not popular during their lifetimes, because many people did not agree with them or did not have their poetry. Whitman and Dickinson were both extremely popular poets after their deaths, and many people continue to read them even today.