viernes, 8 de marzo de 2019

Women@NASA

Women@NASA

Women@NASA

  • Photo of Rosalind Cylar

    Rosalind Cylar

    Growing up in the inner city of the Bronx, New York, Rosalind had no idea she would work for NASA. Her mother, sister and she lived in a small apartment with her aunt and uncle. But, as a young girl, she always knew she wanted to be a lawyer.
    2015
  • Photo of Gail Villanueva

    Gail Villanueva

    Growing up as the daughter of a military officer, Gail had what some might consider a privileged life. They lived all over the world, and she had the opportunity to see and experience an abundance of this world’s great offerings and be exposed to many cultures that benefitted her throughout her life.
    2015
  • Photo of Seunghee Lee

    Seunghee Lee

    When Seunghee Lee’s parents told her about the decision to immigrate to America, she was not happy. She was 17 years old and didn’t want to leave all her friends in South Korea and was afraid of moving to a foreign country that spoke a different language. Although English is taught in South Korean schools, it was limited to reading and writing simple sentences with no speaking lessons.
    2015
  • Photo of Vickie Gutierrez

    Vickie Gutierrez

    One of Vickie’s earliest memories of growing up in San Antonio, Texas is being in a kindergarten class and watching Neil Armstrong walk on the moon. Her teacher chose to include her class in what would become a defining moment in history.
    2015
  • Photo of Crystal Jones

    Crystal Jones

    For Crystal Leathers Jones, growing up surrounded by drugs, crime and poverty made her dreams of working for NASA seem unreachable. Through her determination, hard work and perseverance, Crystal was able to change the course of her life and blaze a path of success that her siblings and others growing up in similar situations could follow.
  • Photo of Rosemary Baize

    Rosemary Baize

    Rosemary Baize began her career in 1988, working as an aerospace technologist in wind tunnels at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. She supported tests on Pegasus boosters, was a project engineer and served as a facility safety head. But she didn’t stop there.
  • Photo of Laura Iraci

    Laura Iraci

    It seemed to Laura Iraci that kids always asked “What do you want to be when you grow up?” as if there were one single right answer. It seemed as if “grown up” was a static condition, never changing. Laura did not have a single childhood passion that shaped her view of who she would be when she reached the destination called “grown up”.
  • Photo of Laurie Grindle

    Laurie Grindle

    As an engineer and a project manager working in aircraft flight research, Laurie Grindle is familiar with the saying: “You can learn more from failure than success.”
  • Photo of Loria West

    Loria West

    When Loria West was 9 years old, she suffered the loss of her parents in a tragic car accident. That same accident left her paralyzed from the waist down; however, her new circumstances did nothing to slow her down
  • Photo of Diep Nguyen

    Diep Nguyen

    Diep Nguyen’s life took a major detour on the morning of April 30, 1975, when she boarded a helicopter piloted by a friend—now her husband—with the intention of spending the weekend with her mother
  • Photo of Huy Tran

    Huy Tran

    While Neil Armstrong was taking his first steps on the surface of the moon, a 6-year-old girl named Huy Tran was climbing a tree. She wanted to climb high enough to watch the historical event unfold through a part in the palm roof of someone else’s home in Vietnam, and she achieved that goal.
  • Photo of QuynhGiao Nguyen

    QuynhGiao Nguyen

    When QuynhGiao Nguyen immigrated from Vietnam to the United States at age 7, she didn’t speak a word of English and had no idea she would grow up to be a NASA scientist.
  • Photo of Hashima Hasan

    Hashima Hasan

    Hashima Hasan’s love for space started when as a five-year old she stood in her grand parents’ backyard in India and watched Sputnik go by overhead. She had no idea how she would achieve her dream to become a scientist and attend Oxford University, as her uncle and grand uncles had done. But achieve it, she did.
  • Photo of Janet Sellars

    Janet Sellars

    Service has always been Janet’s goal and motivation. It is a sense of purpose passed down to her from her mother. She instilled in Janet a strong work ethic. She didn’t have a lot. They weren’t rich. But she taught her how to give and not expect things in return. That has stayed with Janet.
  • Photo of Tahani Amer

    Tahani Amer

    Tahani Amer discovered her natural passion and inclination for engineering while watching her father fixing his car’s engine as she sat inside her small Egyptian apartment. While her love of math created a clear path for a mechanical and aerospace engineering future, it was great teachers and her father that encouraged and guided Dr. Amer.
  • Photo of Sylvia Johnson

    Sylvia Johnson

    Sylvia was born in Sydney, Australia to a family that had a great interest in science. Although she has four brothers, Sylvia was the one most interested in pursuing a scientific career. However, that was easier said than done in those times in a country where women were not that common in science and especially in physical sciences and engineering.
  • Photo of Debra Zamostny

    Debra Zamostny

    Debbie always wanted to play the piano. It was the love of her life. While other kids were playing outside, she was inside practicing. It was the same in music college and playing with the band. She missed countless parties, holidays, and many life-changing events because she was working. But the sacrifice was worth it for her.
  • Photo of Wendy Pennington

    Wendy Pennington

    Wendy Pennington discovered her natural passion and inclination for engineering while enrolled in a mechanical drafting class in high school. While her love of drawing and design provided an architectural roadmap for her future, it was the encouragement and guidance of the teachers who recognized this young woman’s special talents that put her life on a trajectory that would land her at NASA, where she continues to be inspired and challenged to reach even greater heights.
  • Photo of Lori Garver

    Lori Garver

    My interest in space stems from my belief that what we have done, are doing, and can do in space is critical to the future of humanity. Throughout my career—whether it was working directly for NASA, training in Russia to become a space flight participant, advising aerospace corporations how best to help NASA be successful, or having the honor of being the lead for civil space policy for the Obama Presidential Campaign and transition team—I have worked toward that goal.
  • Photo of Donna Leach

    Donna Leach

    As a child, Donna didn’t think about or plan her life toward a career. As the oldest of five sisters and one brother growing up in a home challenged with poverty, alcoholism and violence, her earliest focus became survival.
  • Photo of Stephanie Lacy-Conerly

    Stephanie Lacy-Conerly

    Stephanie’s parents owned a dry cleaning business in Alabama, and it was one of few successful Black-owned businesses in the 1960s. As a child, she saw her parents and siblings work hard to serve the community, provide excellent customer service, and earn a reputation for quality work. This taught her lessons she used later in life.
  • Photo of Meg Nazario

    Meg Nazario

    Dr. Margaret Nazario began her journey into engineering when she was a senior in high school taking physics. While her love of inventing and problem solving provided an architectural roadmap for her future, it was the encouragement and guidance of the teachers who recognized her special talents that put her life on a trajectory that would land her at NASA, where she continues to be inspired and challenged to reach even greater heights.
  • Photo of Monica Ceruti

    Monica Ceruti

    For Monica Ceruti, the trick has been to learn how to balance work and family without compromising either. Today, in addition to having a rewarding home life, her two sons are on the road to having rewarding careers: her oldest son is a college graduate and her youngest son is a cadet at the United States Coast Guard Academy.
  • Photo of Josephine Santiago-Bond

    Josephine Santiago-Bond

    Josephine Santiago-Bond didn’t grow up wanting to work for NASA. Having grown up in the Philippines, NASA was half a world away, and was something she had only read about in old history books, or occasionally heard about on television.
  • Photo of Jennifer Cole

    Jennifer Cole

    For as long as she can remember, Jennifer Cole has been “hooked on anything that flew” – from the roaring A-10 Thunderbolts and A-4 Skyhawks to the thump-thump-thumping helicopters that flew over her home near Willow Grove Naval Air Station outside of Philadelphia, Penn., to the space vehicles of her professional life.
  • Photo of Catherine Bahm

    Catherine Bahm

    Catherine’s road to NASA began at an early age when she declared, in front of her classmates, that she wanted to be the first female astronaut. A young male student rebutted that girls could not become astronauts. Her teacher would have nothing of it, immediately looking at Ms. Bahm and ensuring she knew she could be whatever she wanted to be.
  • Photo of Sharmila Bhattacharya

    Sharmila Bhattacharya

    For Sharmila Bhattacharya, success is not measured by medals or money but by seeing her experiments flown in space, a dream of flight fuelled by her father, a pilot, who told her that being a girl would not deter her from earning a pilot’s license or from being “absolutely anything she wanted to be …”
  • Photo of Clara Wright

    Clara Wright

    Although Clara Wright had to learn a new language and adapt to a different culture and the age of 8, when her family moved from Colombia to the United States, she was always fluent in the language of hard work, perseverance, and integrity – thanks to the example set forth by her parents.
  • Photo of Diane Sims

    Diane Sims

    For Diane Sims, Hurricane Katrina was a not only a moment of destruction and guilt but also of belief and compassion in the human spirit. She recalls, “I remember having a huge sense of guilt because my house survived, and I was the only one in my office that wasn’t displaced.”
  • Photo of Linda McCain

    Linda McCain

    Linda’s earliest memory of space was hearing about the Russians and Sputnik and monkeys flying in space. The world was much different then. There was no Internet or Google. Television offerings were limited, but this was big news at the time. Little did she know that one day NASA would be in her future.
  • Photo of Monica Bowie

    Monica Bowie

    Monica’s mother’s example taught her that hard work pays off. She was a single parent raising five children, and she remains Monica’s inspiration. From her mother, she learned three fundamental life lessons: to be true to herself; to be honest, regardless of the situation; and for every blessing she receives, to help someone else.
  • Photo of Andrea Meyer

    Andrea Meyer

    Andrea Meyer’s life was changed irrevocably when, on one cold Nebraska morning while practicing emergency landing procedures with her flight instructor, her airplane went into a flat spin before crashing into an empty cornfield.
  • Photo of Teresa Foley-Batts

    Teresa Foley-Batts

    As a child, Teresa Foley-Batts really did not think about or plan her life toward any particular career. She was the oldest of five children, and after her parents divorced, the family moved from Nashville, Tenn. to Huntsville, Ala.

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