Program Encourages Teens to Break Glass Ceiling
by Denise Jewell
Daily Free Press, Wednesday, April 15, 1998
BOSTON - A Boston University program designed to introduce female
high-schoolers to successful women in science launched a two-day conference
in the George Sherman Union Metcalf Hall yesterday.
Trying to inspire them to become engineers and scientists, Kalpana
Chawla, a NASA astronaut who orbited the earth in 1997, spoke to the
600-plus 10th- and 11th-graders at the fifth annual Pathways program.
"The NASA presentation was the hook," said Evelyn Scott-Ludwig, a director
at EMC Corporationa and presenter at the conference.
Showing slides of her mission, Chawla told the young women to have
fun with science. She also encouraged them to "dream dreams."
While more than 600 students from area high schools attended the two
programs, the conference has not always seen such success. When BU first
hosted Pathways in 1994, only 75 students participated.
"The program has really grown in many ways, including the diversity
of women who participate," said Cynthia Brossman, a grants administrator
in the College of Arts and Sciences math department. "The benefits of
the program can be seen just by the sheer number of women who come together."
Presenters try to convince the teenagers that dreaming alone isn't
enough to break the glass ceiling. Earning a degree in math or science
is the key, they said.
"We try to express to them that having a technical degree can lead
them to all sorts of interesting careers," Scott-Ludwig said. "We make
science and technology real."
After lunch, the scientists met with students in groups of 10 to discuss
"hot topics," such as the best uses of nuclear energy, the effects of
global warming, climate control and gasoline taxes. Students also toured
BU laboratories.
"We hope that it will give them a perspective on the enormous range
in the fields of science." said Elizabeth Simmons, a founder of the
Pathways program and an assistant professor at BU."