I’m no engineer, nor have I ever had the desire to involve myself in the world of STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics). I can only imagine the weight on one’s shoulders, knowing that a wrongly placed decimal point, in the drafting of an architectural structure, could lead to the deaths of hundreds or even thousands of innocents. It’s a responsibility taken on by only the smartest, bravest and most confident members of society. It also happens to be a profession dominated by men.
Perhaps if the latest trends are any indication, female engineers will one day overtake their male counterparts. But, unfortunately, that day is not today, as women remain vastly underrepresented in scientific fields, even in the most advanced countries around the world.
This month’s featured articles follow several courageous women looking to contradict some of the preconceived notions out there surrounding intelligent women. My Life as… An Engineering Student shows how Meg Mikrut sacrificed any semblance of a social life for one filled with complicated equations and precise calculations. Love, Life and Math: My Life Story follows Maria Lando on an epic cinematic adventure; using math as her superpower, as she turns dreams into scenes on the silver screen. And, in Physics Is Beauty, Lindsay LeBlanc justifies her 3 a.m. laboratory sessions in the search for a Bose-Einstein condensate.
The world needs more women like these, undeterred by the millennia of chauvinism and sexism. My sister Julia, a few years back, earned an engineering degree from the University of Miami. And I couldn’t be prouder. Though I’ve been here in Guangzhou, unable to witness her success first hand, I often have visions of her, standing just 5 feet tall, on some rough and rugged construction site, bossing around guys twice her size. It certainly makes me hopeful for the future, a time when brains always win over brawn. And gender is just some box you check off on an application form.
我不是一名工程師,我也沒有一點欲望要投身到科學、技術、工程,以及數學的世界當中。我只能想象出某個人肩上的重負,深知在描畫一幅建筑結構的草圖時,一個點錯的小數位,就會奪去數百,甚至數千無辜者的生命。這是一項只由最聰明、最勇敢、最自信的社會成員來承擔的責任。那也恰恰是一項由男性主導的專業(yè)。
或許,如果當下走勢是某種昭示的話,那么女性工程人員有一天將會壓倒她們的男性同行。但是,不幸的是,那一天并非今天,因為女性參與科學領域的人數依然嚴重不足,這種情況甚至在世界上最先進的那些國家里亦是如此。
本月的主題文章講述了幾位勇氣可嘉的女性的故事,她們對圍繞在聰慧女性身邊的某些成見發(fā)起了沖擊?!豆た婆淖园住芬晃恼故玖嗣犯瘛っ卓唆斕厝绾螢橐粋€充滿復雜方程式和精確計算的世界,犧牲了正常的社交生活?!稊祵W:我的人生,我的愛》一文講述了瑪麗亞·蘭度史詩般的電影界歷程——運用數學作為她的超能力,將自己的夢想轉化成銀幕上的重重場景。在《物理學之美》一文中,林賽·勒布朗解釋了自己堅持凌晨三點依然在做實驗的原因,只為尋得玻色—愛因斯坦凝聚態(tài)。
這個世界需要更多這樣的女性,她們并沒有被數千年以來的沙文主義和性別歧視嚇阻。我的妹妹茱莉亞,幾年前從邁阿密大學獲得了一個工程學位。當時的我自豪得不得了。雖然,我如今身在廣州,無法直接見證她的成功,但我頭腦中常常有關于她的景象:她站起來只有五英尺高,卻在某個坑坑洼洼的建筑工地上使喚著身邊那些比她塊頭大一倍的人。這當然也讓我對未來抱有希望,希望那個時候智力會戰(zhàn)勝體力。而性別只不過是某個你在申請表上勾選的項目而已。