Wednesday, February 11, 2015

International Women in Science: Trailblazing Scientists Share Their Journey

International Women in Science: Trailblazing Scientists Share Their Journey

            I attended this event at the Chicago Cultural Center on February 11th. There were seven women from, Botswana, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Israel, Mexico, and Poland. They were scientists, researchers and ministers who all had incredible stories. I mistakenly assumed their names would be online, and as a result, didn’t record them as they were long and difficult to spell! It’s a shame because I would love to learn more about what they did.

Overview:

Mexico: She was inspired to study because it was the only way she would be able to travel the world, as her family could never economically support that. She achieved a PHD, studying all over the world, in Denmark, and 5 years in Edinburgh. She heads 140 researchers, of which only 15 are women. She says that in the cities, where people have money, children study science, but very few children study science in rural areas. In Mexico there is a stigma around science, “science women are seen as weird women.”

Hong Kong: She said there were very few girls at university studying science with her, which made it extra hard, though it was already a stressful environment. Her interest lies in environmental protection, but due to lack of jobs, works in infrastructure and city planning with a focus on environmentalism. Hong Kong is apparently very modern and unique, with special bamboo technology to build high rises.

Botswana: She is interested in plants, having patented a special technique to extract chemicals from plant matter using high temperatures and pressures to mimic natural solvents. Below is a short documentary on the Moringa tree (also called “miracle tree”), which is the main plant the Botswanian woman worked with. She said that sadly, women don’t enroll in science in Botswana because they are told that science is “not for ladies!” and that much more needs to be done to encourage women.


Poland: If I heard her correctly she was the director of higher education and science ministry, working especially with Poland’s integration with the EU. She has been the R and D directorate general, working in securing funds. Right now, she controls 80 people, mainly men over 50, (she is young and beautiful and obviously a woman which doesn’t match the people who work under her, so I got the sense that she has to fight to be heard, though she clearly manages it. She’s very charismatic and assertive.) She is pleased to have noticed that more and more women have been working in her field. There aren’t nearly enough programs targeted specifically at women in science in Poland, in her opinion. But there are two new measures, “Baby at University” which promotes daycare for student parents, so that they can go to university with a child, as well as a new type of grant financing scientists, which can be prolonged so that the scientist can have a child during research, and or take a break.

Indonesia UNESCO: This woman works in disaster management, awareness, building infrastructure, helping rural people access and use computers, GPS etc.

Israel: She directs the science education for one district in Israel, focusing on education inequality due to gender and socioeconomic differences. She worries that immigrants are taking STEM jobs due to lack of Israeli interest, and so she has her school district begin to offer advanced sciences in year 7. This has made it so that 45% of students in her district are studying advanced sciences, 15% more than the national average.

The event was difficult to understand because the women all had such strong accents, and the cultural differences made it so that each women was used to trying to get across a different sort of thing, be it their personal value, the value of their country, the value of women, or the issues immigrants create. Regardless, they all had incredible experiences to share and were clearly insanely intelligent. I wish that the woman who moderated it wasn’t so condescending toward them, interrupting and trying to finish their sentences.

Women aren’t highly represented in STEM fields in America either. While women hold close to 50% of jobs, they only hold 25% of STEM jobs. I believe this is mainly due to stigma around science and math being things only men can succeed at. Perhaps what is more worrying is that women with STEM degrees are less likely to pursue STEM careers, usually switching over to education or healthcare, potentially due to such a low concentration of female peers.

“One of the things that I really strongly believe in is that we need to have more girls interested in math, science, and engineering. We’ve got half the population that is way underrepresented in those fields and that means that we’ve got a whole bunch of talent…not being encouraged the way they need to.”

-- President Barack Obama, February 2013


3 comments:

  1. Thank you for sharing about these passionate women in science! In Advanced Biology this past semester, we watched a documentary about the discovery of the structure of DNA. While most know who Watson and Crick are, many do not know who Rosalind Franklin is — the woman who was the first to image the structure of DNA. It is easily arguable that without Franklin, Watson and Crick could not have created their model. Women in science are forgotten in history, as well as modern classrooms and initiatives. Thanks to women like those who spoke to you, and women like you yourself, the situation can (hopefully) begin to change.

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  2. Maddie, do you think the stereotypes of women scientists as weird/unladylike are purposely (though perhaps unconsciously) propagated to keep women uneducated and out of positions of power and authority?

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    1. A thought out plan to keep women out of power is possible, but potentially a bit of a stretch. I think it's an ingrained cultural undercurrent that women aren't valuable in positions of power, more of a subconscious issue.

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