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Leveraging Social Media for Professional Opportunities; 17th August 2022 – AWIS Webinar
Often, how we see ourselves is not synonymous with how others see us. How do you present yourself to the world? In this digital age of social media, having a strong online presence can allow for more opportunities. Branding is the best way to give your audience insight into who you are and what you offer. It’s also a wonderful way to inspire others to connect to and act on your desired goals. In the age of technology, researchers and non-researchers alike can benefit from crafting their own social media brands. Jazmine Benjamin will provide tools and action items to create your own brand, expand your network, and foster collaborations. Learning Objectives: What a brand is and how that applies to social media; Things to consider when creating your brand; Tips for branding yourself on popular social media platforms; Tools for building your platforms and maintaining consistency. Participants can use these skills to create social media accounts and websites that foster collaborative projects, research grants, and expand their networks.
Posted on 11 Jul 2022
Taking Action: How Do I Become an Ally? 19th July 2022- AWIS Webinar
Racial bias and prejudice can be present in all sectors of business and institutions. Since the uprisings of 2020, many professionals have wondered how to get involved in social justice and anti-racism. If you ever asked yourself, “How do I become an ally,” this webinar is for you.
Posted on 11 Jul 2022
Ukrainian mathematician becomes second woman to win prestigious Fields Medal
Ukrainian number theorist Maryna Viazovska is among the four winners of the 2022 Fields Medal, one of the highest honours in mathematics, which is conventionally awarded to people under 40. The other winners are James Maynard, a number theorist at the University of Oxford, UK; June Huh, a specialist in combinatorics at Princeton University in New Jersey; and Hugo Duminil-Copin, who studies statistical physics at the Institute of Advanced Scientific Studies near Paris. The International Mathematical Union (IMU) announced the winners at an award ceremony in Helsinki on 5 July. Viazovska, who is based at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL), is the second woman ever to earn the award. She is best known for her solution to the sphere-packing problem - finding the arrangement of spheres that can take up the largest portion of a volume - in eight dimensions.
Posted on 11 Jul 2022
NCWIT Announces 2022 Recipients of the Harrold and Notkin Research and Graduate Mentoring Award and Joanne McGrath Cohoon Service Award
The National Center for Women & Information Technology (NCWIT) has named Dr. Tiffany Barnes, Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at North Carolina State University, the recipient of the 2022 Harrold and Notkin Research and Graduate Mentoring Award. NCWIT has also named Dr. Christine Alvarado, Associate Dean for Students of the Jacobs School of Engineering and Teaching Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of California, San Diego, the recipient of the 2022 NCWIT Joanne McGrath Cohoon Service Award. The Harrold and Notkin Research and Graduate Mentoring Award is sponsored by the NCWIT Board of Directors and recognizes faculty members from non-profit institutions who distinguish themselves through outstanding research and excellent graduate mentoring, as well as those who recruit, encourage, and promote women and minorities in computing. It is given in memory of Mary Jean Harrold and David Notkin, to honor their outstanding research, graduate mentoring, and diversity contributions.
Posted on 27 Jun 2022
At 17, she was her family's breadwinner on a McDonald's salary. Now she's gone into space
Katya Echazarreta previously worked at NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, is pursuing her master's in engineering at Johns Hopkins University, and is a popular SciCommer on TikTok. Now she became the first-ever Mexican-born woman to go to space!A rocket built by Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin carried its fifth group of passengers to the edge of space, including the first-ever Mexican-born woman to make such a journey. The 60-foot-tall suborbital rocket took off from Blue Origin's facilities in West Texas at 9:26am ET, vaulting a group of six people to more than 62 miles above the Earth's surface - which is widely deemed to make the boundary of outer space - and giving them a few minutes of weightlessness before parachuting to landing. Most of the passengers paid an undisclosed sum for their seats. But Katya Echazarreta, an engineer and science communicator from Guadalajara, Mexico, was selected by a nonprofit called Space for Humanity to join this mission from a pool of thousands of applicants. The organization's goal is to send "exceptional leaders" to space and allow them to experience the overview effect, a phenomenon frequently reported by astronauts who say that viewing the Earth from space give them a profound shift in perspective.
Posted on 23 Jun 2022
Women more likely to win awards that are not named after men
Women are more likely to win awards that aren’t named after a person than prizes named after a man, research has found. The study1, presented on 25 May at the European Geoscience Union (EGU) general assembly in Vienna, reviewed almost 9,000 recipients across roughly 350 awards in the fields of Earth and environmental sciences and cardiology, as well as those given out by national scientific bodies in the United Kingdom and United States. The study has yet to be published. It found that women have received only around 15% of these awards, going back to the eighteenth century. For the 214 awards that are named after men, female winners fall to just 12% (see ‘Award winners by gender’). But women were the winners 24% of the time for the 93 awards not named after anyone - a trend that was consistent over time, says Stefan Krause, an Earth and environmental scientist at the University of Birmingham, UK, who presented the research at the EGU meeting. The results suggest that there might be a link between the name of an award and who receives it, he says. “If the awards are not named after a person, the gender balance in prizes is more balanced,” he adds.
Posted on 05 Jun 2022
NASA's Cynthia Rosenzweig Receives 2022 World Food Prize
Cynthia Rosenzweig, a senior research scientist and head of the Climate Impacts Group at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York City, received the 2022 World Food Prize from the World Food Prize Foundation on May 5. According to the World Food Prize Foundation, the World Food Prize is a prestigious international award conceived as the "Nobel Prize for Food and Agriculture" with a mission to elevate innovations and inspire action to sustainably increase the quality, quantity, and availability of food for all. Rosenzweig was selected for the award for her research to understand the relationship between climate and food systems and forecast how both will change in the future. Her modeling work has provided a foundation for decision-makers around the world to create strategies to mitigate climate change and adapt our food systems to a changing planet, which has helped communities worldwide address the consequences of Earth’s changing climate.
Posted on 30 May 2022
WITI's 28th Annual Women in Technology Summit: Saving our Planet through Digital Transformation; June 21-22, 2022 • Online
Attend Women In Technology International's 28th Annual Virtual Summit 2022 that will feature: Keynotes showcasing women worldwide who are tackling climate change and accelerating sustainability; Tech sessions on AI/ML, Agile/DevOps, Blockchain, Cloud, Cybersecurity, DX Leadership, Robotics, and more; Panels and workshops on leadership and mentoring; Global networking sessions so you can connect and share with other professional women around the world; And back by popular demand: WITI’s coaching circles, pairing speakers with small groups to discuss professional development topics to further your career – including creativity, teamwork, and problem-solving.
Posted on 30 May 2022
Association for Women in Science – Annual Report 2021
AWIS is proud to release their 2021 Annual Report! They achieved several milestones in their 50th anniversary year - thanks to their members, donors, and advocates.
Posted on 09 May 2022
WITI's 28th Annual Women in Technology Summit: Saving our Planet through Digital Transformation; June 21-22, 2022 • Online
Forward-thinking women understand that climate change is an urgent challenge, a generational responsibility … and a professional opportunity. The good news is that we women in technology are the world’s best bet in the fight for a clean, healthy, and sustainable planet. And we have the tools to do it: Digital Transformation (DX) helps organizations do a better job of both delivering their traditional value propositions and creating new ones – especially those focused on sustainability. Accenture finds that by using public cloud services, enterprises could cut their IT-related greenhouse gas emissions by some 6%, the equivalent of taking 22 million cars off the road. At the crux of achieving sustainability through DX are exciting new technologies like artificial intelligence, blockchain, cloud computing, and the Internet of Things. This will create both technical and non-technical career opportunities, and WITI is here to help you explore them. WITI’s 2022 Virtual Summit will feature: Keynotes showcasing women worldwide who are tackling climate change and accelerating sustainability, Tech sessions on AI/ML, Agile/DevOps, Blockchain, Cloud, Cybersecurity, DX Leadership, Robotics, and more, Panels and workshops on leadership and mentoring and Global networking sessions so you can connect and share with other professional women around the world.
Posted on 09 May 2022

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