Happy Ada Lovelace Day!

Oct 16, 2012 10:05

It is time again for that most splendid of holidays, Ada Lovelace Day!  Once a year, bloggers around the world gather to sing the praises of inspiring women in the STEM fields.  And if you are a lady-identified person in science, technology, engineering, or math, I most cordially salute you.

I wasn't sure for a while whom or what to write about ( Read more... )

ada lovelace day, marie curie, science, general nerdery

Leave a comment

Comments 12

hamsterwoman October 16 2012, 17:19:15 UTC
She and her husband Pierre were partners not just in love but in science, which is so cool to me.

Me too! And of course it made me immediately think of the Kate Beaton comic :)

Reply

ladymercury_10 October 16 2012, 18:57:48 UTC
Irene and her husband were like that, too. I had to do some research on lady scientists as part of an internship once, and I found a bunch of pictures of the Joliot-Curies together in their lab and I kind of melted over how cute they were together.

Kate Beaton pretty much has a comic for everything, doesn't she? :P

Reply


giallarhorn October 16 2012, 17:36:07 UTC
While I'm a huge fan for Marie Curie, I personally root for Rosalind Franklin or Jane Goodall, or maybe even Grace Hopper. I'm more partial to Rosalind Franklin, since she gets absolutely no attention for what she contributed and basically did.

But yes, the advent of radiation was a pretty important thing :D

Reply

ladymercury_10 October 16 2012, 18:54:47 UTC
Those are all cool ladies! I am a bit of a Grace Hopper fangirl as well, and I have a friend whom we have decided should be nicknamed Rosalind, for Rosalind Franklin. She is actually a computer science major and so it has nothing to do with her life, it's part of a complicated inside joke, but yay for lady geneticists!

Reply


eve11 October 16 2012, 18:37:16 UTC
ha, that comic. You know for all my math-iness I'm not much of a scientist. I surprised myself after undergrad saying "Hmmm... perhaps I should apply all these funky algorithms". So it's always cool to read up on scientists. I have this thought that stats has historically been a bit less of a boys club than straight math, but I don't have history or numbers to back it up. Certainly in my department, at least the students were very balanced. You did see the ceiling though... the higher up the tenure track, the fewer women represented.

Reply

ladymercury_10 October 16 2012, 19:03:13 UTC
I am not much of a scientist, either, haha. I fangirl science from a distance, but every time someone suggests I actually take a science class, I kind of go, "What, and do a lab EVERY WEEK?"

That's interesting--I don't know very much about the history of stats, but yeah, math has kind of been a hardcore boy's club, people like Emmy Noether and Sophie Germain notwithstanding. I think what the research says now is that among undergrads the gender balance is starting to even out, and I think I saw a figure that women are now 30% of grad students in math? But yeah, tenure takes a long time to show changes.

Reply


openmicnights October 16 2012, 21:48:27 UTC
Yes!

As a science major, I feel it's a pity that we don't dedicate at least one class to those people who made major contributions like Marie Curie, and Rosalind Franklin and everyone else over here. We had an obligatory class on History at uni, but they explored so little of it. :(

Reply

ladymercury_10 October 16 2012, 21:57:19 UTC
A history of science class (with special emphasis on all the lady scientists who got ignored because they were, well, ladies) would be awesome! I did take History of Mathematics as an undergrad, but it was a math class, so it wasn't very biographical. It was a lot of "Here are the first two volumes of The Elements. Have fun with Euclid, and when I see you on Thursday, I want you to be able to reenact the first five proofs in Book 1." Which was still pretty cool, but not history-focused in quite the same way I had expected.

Reply

openmicnights October 16 2012, 22:08:55 UTC
Exactly. We had History of Pharmaceutical Sciences, and it was mostly about Galenus and Hippocrates, but not as fun as a history-focused class would have been. But yeah, I guess I probably just miss History, being a science major.

Reply

ladymercury_10 October 16 2012, 23:18:02 UTC
Yeah. I miss liberal arts school and getting to be one of everything, although I don't suppose I miss having to read those super dense philosophy essays that they managed to sneak into every subject. :P

Reply


np_complete October 31 2012, 01:33:14 UTC
It's amazing how many programmers have never heard of Grace Hopper. Even I, who have gone around saying things like, "She was the mother of us all!" didn't realize until last year that she wrote the first compiler.

When I wear my Polish-American Girl hat I am always so proud of Marie Skłodowska-Curie. (And extra points for putting in that "ł"!) It always annoyed me that so many people think she was French!

Reply

ladymercury_10 October 31 2012, 01:43:15 UTC
Grace Hopper really was amazing. :D That makes me think of something funny--have you seen this Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal comic strip that mentions her?

You should definitely be proud of Marie. :) And haha, I had a lot of Polish friends in high school, so I picked up a couple things, like the l with the stroke in it, and that sz actually sounds more like sh.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up