Grace
Lockhart was the first woman in the whole British
Empire to graduate from a university. It was 1874 when she got a science degree
up at Mount Allison University in New Brunswick, Canada, but it was almost
another 50 years before all women got the right to graduate or even to attend
classes in Canada (and the UK). Nicaragua started allowing women in university about 100 years before that and Italy started
about 700 years earlier. Once women could graduate, they still usually didn’t
get credit for their discoveries and inventions. But that didn’t stop some of
the brightest female minds from contributing to human knowledge and technology.
We hear little bits now, often in form of stories about the wives who innovated beside their husbands, brothers, and employers, did the field work, catalogued all the specimens, built the telescopes, designed the experiments, or crunched the data. The information is coming out now. Slowly.
We hear little bits now, often in form of stories about the wives who innovated beside their husbands, brothers, and employers, did the field work, catalogued all the specimens, built the telescopes, designed the experiments, or crunched the data. The information is coming out now. Slowly.
Blockbuster
films like Hidden
Figures, memes that give credit
where it is due, and announcements of “all female firsts” like the space
walk this month led by Kristen Facciol,
a
female flight controller from the Canadian Space Agency give us the sense that there is a whole iceberg
of information waiting to be revealed about female scientists throughout
history.
scientist: "does everyone here know what Watson and Crick discovered?"— Robby Kraft (@RobbyKraft) May 3, 2016
me from back of room: "Rosalind Franklin's notes"
My high
school science teacher 30 years ago taught me about Madame Curie’s
experiments with radiation, but that was the only thing I’d ever heard
about a woman doing science. It’s getting easier to learn more about women
doing science throughout history: buy books about them; watch movies about them;
ask questions about them at the science centre; ask teachers about them. The more
interest we show, the more answers will get shared.
Search this
blog for “women” and you’ll
find several posts. A
Mighty Girl regularly posts stories and cool posters about female
scientists and inventors and all kinds of other interesting women, both old and
current. Brain
Pickings has great stories about women in science, as does scientificwomen.net, and you’ll find great summaries on YouTube, too. Take a
look around, then tell others the cool things you learned.
by Adrienne Montgomerie
photo from Pixabay
1 comment:
It's unfortunate that this is still a conversation in 2019. In Iran for example in the 1970s women used to attend university, but have had to fight hard to regain that right, and continue to struggle today. It's also a shame that even in North America women were not recognized for many of their achievements. At Hathaway Research in Toronto, Canada, our team consists of both men & women scientists, and we encourage young women in school to seek science & engineering careers as a profession. Credit should always be given to where credit is due.
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