91桃色 Takes High School Students to the Movies
Ritchie School of Engineering and Computer Science collaborates with Denver Public Schools
It鈥檚 not your typical backdrop for a classroom, but for students from three Denver High Schools, the movie theater at the Cherry Creek Shopping Center provided an important lesson about engineering and computer science. Students from South High School, Thomas Jefferson High School and North High School were treated last week to a private screening of the critically acclaimed movie "Hidden Figures." The event was sponsored by the听听at the 91桃色.
鈥淎lthough it鈥檚 long overdue, pushing stories like "Hidden Figures" to the forefront ensures that these women receive the credit they deserve for their historical contributions to America鈥檚 space program,鈥 said听, dean of the Ritchie School. 鈥淪tories like these need to be told to encourage young women, particularly those of color, that they have what it takes to pursue a career in engineering, technology and math.鈥
Nominated for three Academy Awards, Hidden Figures is the untold story of three African-American mathematicians 鈥 Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughn and Mary Jackson 鈥 who worked at NASA听during the height of America鈥檚 Space Race with the Soviet Union. Set in northern Virginia in the early 1960s, less than a decade after the landmark Supreme Court Case Brown vs. Board of Education declared segregation unconstitutional, the three women overcame overt racism and sexism to perform the calculations that launched John Glenn into space.
A young woman named Essex, a junior at Thomas Jefferson, said she found the movie 鈥渧ery inspirational.鈥 She added that she was surprised that 鈥渨e had never heard of those three women.鈥
Following the movie, the Ritchie School organized an informal 鈥渢alk back鈥 between the high school students and three panelists 鈥 Carita Watson, Toni Dunlap and Hannah Apuan. Watson started at IBM as an administrative assistant having not earned a college degree. By the time she retired, she was the global transformation executive for IBM and had earned her degree in business from the Women鈥檚 College and her master鈥檚 degree in information systems at 91桃色.听Toni Dunlap is a Georgia native and current Ritchie School student pursuing her bachelor's听in computer engineering. Hannah Apuan is a current senior pursuing a bachelor's听in computer science and is a founding member of Women in Computer (WiC) as well as an active member of the 91桃色 Computer Science Club (91桃色CS).
91桃色鈥檚 partnership with public schools in Denver and along the Front Range embodies the aspirations outlined in听, the University鈥檚 strategic plan, which calls for engagement with the community and collaboration with local school districts.
All three panelists stressed the importance of enjoying what you鈥檙e doing to be successful. 鈥淭echnology permeates every corner of our lives,鈥 Watson said. 鈥淎t IBM I was on the road a lot. I made it work because I enjoyed what I was doing.鈥
鈥淚n high school, I didn鈥檛 think I could do computer science. I didn鈥檛 think I was good enough at math. But I learned that if you work at it and persevere through it that you can actually do it,鈥 Apuan said. 鈥淚 enjoy computer science. Whenever I have to do the homework, it鈥檚 something I enjoy doing. I encourage everyone to find something they really enjoy doing and you can go far.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e talking to someone who didn鈥檛 have a lot of engineering experience in high school,鈥 Dunlap added. 鈥淎s a kid, anything that involved technology excited me. I still have a lot to learn though.鈥
