Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Diversity In Technology Part #2 - Granville T. Woods

 

    

    Granville T. Woods contributed to the field of technology by making essential developments toward inventions like the telephone and streetcar. He was an inventor who filed a number of patents for devices like the telegraph, an improved steam boiler furnace, and an improved telephone transmitter. Woods' inspiration likely came from courses he took throughout his younger years, in electricity and engineering; he realized how impactful these technologies would be for the future. A lack of representation in the engineering/inventing fields impacted Woods due to his race. With every position he reached during his work on the British steamship, the Ironsides, he was discriminated against simply for being African American. He was unhappy with his inability to achieve larger, more important roles, and so he eventually established his own machine shop in Cincinnati.

    In order to combat racial bias in computing and technology in today's world, companies and individuals alike must access their own biases and work toward equality within the realm of jobs and opportunities for all. 

Sources:

https://www.biography.com/inventors/granville-t-woodshttps://ohiohistorycentral.org/w/Granville_T._Woods 





Diversity In Technology Part #1 - Mary Jackson

 



    Mary Jackson contributed to the field of technology through her work as a NASA aerospace engineer. She was the first African American female to work for NASA, and she worked on the West Computing Wing where she and fellow mathematicians provided data crucial to the US Space Program's early success. Jackson was inspired to pursue this field of study by the sole idea of trailblazing for fellow female engineers and POC alike. Under-representation influenced her experience greatly. When engineer Kazimierz Czarnecki offered Jackson a job to work on his wind-speed tunnel, she was required to take training courses in order to gain the necessary promotion and change her title from mathematician to engineer. Due to the segregation in Virginia, Mary Jackson had to request special permission to take the classes with her white peers and fight for her right to education. After she was accepted to the class, Jackson was successful in spite of the discrimination she faced and later became the first Black female engineer at NASA in 1958. 
    In order to combat racial bias in computing and technology in today's world, companies and individuals alike must access their own biases and work toward equality within the realm of jobs and opportunities for all. 


Sources:
https://www.nasa.gov/content/mary-w-jackson-biography 
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Mary-Jackson-mathematician-and-engineer


Diversity In Technology Part #2 - Granville T. Woods

           Granville T. Woods contributed to the field of technology by making essential developments toward inventions like the telephone a...