Women in Technology and Science (WITS)

Fall 2010 WITS Events

 

October is UO Science Savvy Month for Women and Girls

Location: White Stag Building, Portland

Registration required

CT5: College Tips and Tactics for Technically Talented Teens
Monday, October 25, 2010: Reception 5:30pm. Program 6-7:30pm.

Dancing with the Stars — and Other Space Objects
Monday, October 4: 4:00pm — 7:30pm
Open House: This event takes approximately 1.5 hours to complete and can be started at any time, come at your convenience

 


 

Fall 2009 WITS Events

 

October is UO Science Savvy Month for Women and Girls

Location: White Stag Building, Portland

 

Science Savvy Women: Breaking through the Plexiglass Ceiling

CSI Girls: Science Sleuthing for Curious Kids

College Tips and Tactics for Technically Talented Teens

A Career Journey from Neuroscience to HIV/AIDS in Africa

 


 

 Fall 2007 WITS Forum

 

The first WITS Forum, held on October 20, 2007, brought together more than 80 participants concerned with the status of women in scientific and technical fields. Participants included 15 UO faculty, numerous donors and potential donors, UO grad students, and local high school students and their parents. The Forum provided an opportunity for women to network and to learn more about the value women bring to research, the issues they face, and their role in the university.

Several follow-up tours were arranged for interested women to learn more about work going on in UO science labs run by female faculty. (If you would be interested in a tour of UO science research facilities led by female faculty, contact Sarah Cheesman, (541) 346-0044 or sec@cas.uoregon.edu.)

The keynote speaker at the first WITS Forum was Dr. Geraldine Richmond, the Richard M. and Patricia H. Noyes Professor of Chemistry at UO. Dr. Richmond specializes in physical and environmental chemistry, optics and spectroscopy, and surface and material science. Dr. Richmond has perhaps become most well known for the creation of COACh, a highly successful nationwide organization developed in 1999 to promote the recruitment and retention of women in science and engineering. The program is designed to address issues that keep women scientists and engineers from reaching their goals.