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Diib Abdi, Inclusive Education Assistant reflects on an event celebrating and recognising women of colour in science that took place at the Natural History Museum.

STEMinism

STEMinism matters…TeachFirst mentions that only 12% of engineers are female and just 13% of STEM workers at management level are women. TeachFirst comments: 

We believe that a lack of representation (whether in textbooks or in front of the whiteboard) has damaging effects on gender-bias, leading to less girls taking these subjects further.

This is compounded for women of colour where there is a lack of representation in our corridors and in our displays. 

Key figures

The Women in Science: Women of Colour tour begins with a short talk celebrating Katherine Johnson an African American mathematician and key figure in the representation of Black women in the science field.  A young Katherine had an obsession with counting, whereby she would count her steps to school, church and the number of dishes she would wash. This influenced her career ahead in becoming a maths teacher. Katherine always strived in school particularly in maths where she was taught mathematical content beyond her years. At the age of 34, Katherine was scouted by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) becoming the first Black women at the institute. This was a turning point that established more diversity at NASA in the years to come dismantling racism and segregation.

Katherine Johnson Biography - NASA

Recommendation: Hidden Figures (film) 

About the tour

The tour involved exploring different sections of the museum managed by various women of colour in science. The first being Miranda Lowe a curator of Crustacea who manages the museum collection. Miranda has been involved in breaking that barriers for ethnic minority staff at the Natural History Museum by creating a space to drive inclusion and diversity known as the museum detox.

To learn more about Miranda Lowe Miranda Lowe | Natural History Museum (nhm.ac.uk)

Miranda lowe
 
Image courtsey of NHM (Natural History Museum)

Nadine Gabriel – studied Geology at University College of London (UCL) and volunteered at the Natural History Museum where she later became the Curator of Mineralogy with a particular interest in quartz (one molecule of silicone and 2 molecules of oxygen).

Nadine Gabriel

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 To learn more about Nadine Gabriel Nadine Gabriel: studying 4.6 billion years of history | Natural History Museum (nhm.ac.uk)

 IMG_8817

Giving credit where it is due

Along the tour you will learn of the importance of giving credit where it is due. A majority of the collections within the museum were built on the exploitation of indigenous people through colonialism and thus this something that should be taken into account.

 

Ali - NHM 
 
Ali image 

Ali, 1905 
via Wikimedia Commons

Along the tour you will hear the story of a Malay boy named Ali who taught Alfred Russel Wallace (an English naturalist, biolgist and explorer) about the preservation of animal skin through a process known as taxidermy. 

To learn more about Ali https://daily.jstor.org/ali-alfred-russel-wallaces-right-hand-gun/

Addressing the leaky pipeline
So the question remains of how to address the leaky pipeline and see more women of colour in acaedemia and STEM jobs where they belong – afterall, they have a long history of contributing to science and medicine from ancient history to today…. 

See  Equal Representation in Academia (sgul.ac.uk)

 

Link to Women in Science tours at the Natural History Museum:

Women in Science Tour | Natural History Museum (nhm.ac.uk)

Read more…

Women in science and research at the Natural History Museum | Natural History Museum (nhm.ac.uk)

References:

Women of Color in STEM: The Past, Present, and Future | Maryville Online 

STEM Jobs See Uneven Progress in Increasing Gender, Racial and Ethnic Diversity | Pew Research Center 

 

Diib Abdi

Professional Training Year Student | Inclusive Education Assistant

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