Saturday, November 16, 2024
Tags Posts tagged with "STEM"

STEM

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Jacksonville, Florida should be very proud of their future astronaut who has spent most of her young life promoting STEM, and making headlines about her future of endeavors of wanting to be travel into outer space. Fourteen year old Taylor Richardson not only has big dreams, but she has set out to use her passion to help other young women and expose them to STEM. In her most recent passion project, she created a GoFundMe to raise funds in order to take girls to go see the movie, “A Wrinkle in Time”; a film produced by Ava Duvernay and Oprah Winfrey. Richardson explained why this was so important to her:

“This campaign is so very important to me because it will give me the opportunity to change not only girls perception ofSTEM[science, technology, engineering, mathematics] and space exploration but boys as well,”

The movie, set to be released in March, is a story about a young girl who is transported through time and space, to rescue the girl’s dad who is a scientist and is being held prisoner on another planet. In order to meet her goal, Taylor Richardson’s wanted to raise $15,000; as of today, she’s surpassed that goal raising over $17,000.

Taylor is no stranger to the spotlight. In 2017, she was named a member of Teen Vogue’s Class of 2017, 21 under 21 for girls who are changing the world. She cleverly calls herself a “STEMinist” and she previously raised money for girls to go see “Hidden Figures”.

“This campaign [“Send 1,000 Girls To Wrinkle In Time”] means a lot to me because it shows a female protagonist in a science fiction film. Girls will know that the possibility of going into space, exploring other planets, being rocket scientists, engineers, mathematicians and astronauts for them is not that it is limited but limitless!”

Good for Taylor for being a young role model, and being so passionate about giving back to her peers.

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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Photo Source :The Alabama
Photo Source :The Alabama

She is one of a small number of female physicists in the United States, but Dr. Hadiyah-Nicole Green is making amazing strides strides in her field. A former Homecoming Queen from Alabama A&M University, she also holds her Masters and PHD from the University of Alabama at Birmingham. As an assistant Professor of Physics at Tuskegee University, it appears as if Dr. Green may have her plate full, but she feels it is her duty to speak out due to the amount of exposure blackwomen have in the STEM field. In her interview with AL.com

“Usually if there is an invitation to speak at a forum like that, I accept it because I feel like it’s a responsibility,” she said. “There are so few of us (black women in STEM fields) I don’t feel like I have the luxury to say I’m too busy.”

Amidst her challenging career, Dr. Hadiyah Green developed a patent-pending technology that uses laster activated nanoparticles to treat cancer – and for that she won a $1.1 million grant to further the development of this technology. In her interview, she stated:

“I’m really hoping this can change the way we treat cancer in America. There are so many people who only get a three-month or six-month survival benefit from the drugs they take. Then three or six months later, they’re sent home with no hope, nothing else we can do. Those are the patients I want to try to save, the ones where regular medicine isn’t effective for them.”

Dr. Green is passionate about her research; after the death of both of her parents, she was raised by her aunt and uncle, who later on, were both diagnosed with cancer. She watched her aunt, who refused treatment due to the side effects suffer, and again watched her uncle (3 months later) who opted to receive treatment, deal with the horrible side effects. While taking time out of school to assist her uncle, she witnessed the devastating effects that cancer treatment caused.

Later when she returned to her studies, she earned a BS in Physics with a concentration in fiberoptics, went on to attend University of Alabama on a full scholarship, and developed the idea of using lasers to treat cancer minus the side effects a patient would typically experience with radiation and chemotherapy. In her interview with the Alabama she explained the science behind her idea:

“As a physicist I’ve created a physical treatment that is not specific to the biology of the cancer,” she said. “It’s a platform technology. It’s not cancer type-specific, though it can treat the cancer specifically. That’s a concept my friends who are biologists struggle with.”

In the meantime, Dr. Green still continues to speak to youth groups, conduct interviews and continue her mentorship despite her busy schedule. She believes this is crucial since young girls don’t get to see many women like her, she explains,

“There are black female scientists who don’t get media exposure, because of that, young black girls don’t see those role models as often as they see Beyonce or Nicki Minaj. It’s important to know that our brains are capable of more than fashion and entertainment and music, even though arts are important.”

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

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