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Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Happy Ada Lovelace Day!


As I sit here at my keyboard trying to be inspired to Blog about Women in Technology and Science to honor Ada Lovelace I am sort of put aside to what has brought my own self to a career in technology. Those who study or know the greats of computer science also know that one of the other greats in computer science history was also a woman.  Rear Admiral Grace Hopper was renowned in the field and congress has enacted Computer Science Education Week in December (5-11, 2010) to raise awareness to Computer Science and honor Grace’s Birthday.  Similar to Ada Lovelace in being the first to write a program, Grace Hopper was the first to write a compiler.  Aren’t women geeks just amazing? 
Ok, so back to my story or HerStory as we call it in the Girl Scouts…what inspired me, this writer artist, visionary of sorts to end up in a tech field promoting science and technology education.  To be honest, it was purely by accident.  I was set in my ways to set off in my education and become the teacher that I had always dreamed that I would be.  I would teach middle school, I would teach imagination and creative writing wherever it could fit into someone’s curriculum.
Having already spent a few years as a Navy wife being told that I could wait until my spouse was on shore duty, I postponed my education long enough.  So I found myself at the college signing up for classes for the second semester waiting in a line at the bookstore where I had worked part time.  I overheard a girl directly in front of me talking about a job “on base” and with her friend clearly uninterested, I poked my nose in and said that I could not help but overhear.  I was interviewed a few days later at the MacDonald’s on base and I must say the rest is history.   
The marriage didn’t last but the schooling certainly did and I continued as a single parent and put myself through school which at one point turned into more of a necessity versus a longing.  It wasn’t long before I figured out that a teacher’s salary was not going to support myself and my children and that the technology classes would better support the jobs that I had and where I was going.  Technology was where the money was, even if I had to fight for it.
I remember since then being interviewed for jobs and things being commented such as, do you think she would be the kind to get upset if she broke a nail or would I be intimidated by authority.  I remember asking for a pay raise once and being told that I should quit school and get married.  I remember being interrupted in the middle of a presentation and it being directed in a different direction.  I remember being scolded that I have done this longer that you and I should know far more, I remember being for being so good at my job that it took three people to replace me. 
Probably one of the most compelling times was when my job was to provide input for improvement and the developer did not like that I made any suggestions at all so went to the manager who scolded me for making them.  I think shortly thereafter I was being funded for 3.5 man years asking for help (that finally came 18 months later) and got scolded because one of the man years was pulled back by the program.  Funny that the manager never realized that I was doing such a good job that people wanted me.  They wanted to fund me so that I would work on their stuff.  Later he apologized.
Ok, so why am I here. Years later I see what I have done.  I know the good work that I have accomplished and I know that the program I worked on used to send me all over the country to tech people what I/we were doing with technology and how they could do it better.  People listened to me and trusted my opinion and my knowledge and I carried a sense of respect in spite of the bad ways that some treat women in technology.
In the middle of all of this, I was able to bring my children into the technology.  I was able to expose my sons and daughters to state of the art technology that many children did not or never would be able to see.  My eldest son was inspired and he took off with his interests similar technologies.  My younger children were exposed to math and science people as part of normal life.  It would not be strange to go to meet with friends and to be talking about a better way to do something. 
This became the impression that is left with my family.  That technology is acceptable and that someone is always looking for a better way.  This instilled into my son has brought him forward and has helped me to see that people like Ada Lovelace, Grace Hopper and myself somehow keep the inspiration going.  It is up to those of us in the technology careers to inspire those that come after us for the world of science and technology is ever changing and it is in the inspiration of our own children that we can build a future in technology for all children.  Happy Ada Lovelace Day.

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