Maria Mitchell Women of Science Symposium Is Coming!

Jascin N. Leonardo Finger • July 12, 2021


Tickets are live at www. mmwss.org/registration for the second in-person Maria Mitchell Women of Science Symposium (MMWSS) September 23-25, 2021!

We are excited to be returning after being virtual in a shortened form last year. We have a great line up of speakers and panelists including:


Nicole Cabrera Salazar

Tara Spann

Dionne Hoskins-Brown

Amy Bower

Nancy Gray

Jen Heemstra

Sabine von Sengbusch

Chiara Mingarelli


With themes around diversity, equity, and inclusion and retaining women and girls in the STEM fields, as well as mentoring, this will again be a hands-on experience in which we are all problem solving together.


Space is limited and registration closes September 10, 2021 so make sure to sign up.  We will again be at the Babson Executive Conference Center in Wellesley, Mass.

Our fantastic sponsors include:


Dana-Farber Cancer Institute                   

Axcelis Technologies           

MassTech

Simons Foundation

Tupancy-Harris Foundation

American Philosophical Society (scholarship)

MassSpace Grant Consortium (Mass student scholarship)

Stinson LLP

Vassar

DE Shaw and Co.

Novartis

Schwartz Hannum

MassBIO

American Astronomical Society


And, we have some limited scholarships available for students and teachers.

Come one come all – but space is limited!


JNLF

Recent Posts

By Jascin N. Leonardo Finger May 5, 2025
I have posted this during Women’s History Month before but because it is March and Women’s History Month, I think it’s worth repeating. It’s clever and helps to tell an important story in women’s history while giving it a bit of a 21 st century twist. It comes via the National Women’s History Project .  JNLF
May 1, 2025
“If you don’t look, you don’t see. You have to go and look.” -Edith Andrews
By Jascin N. Leonardo Finger April 28, 2025
Lynn, Ap. 25 1869  My dear President, I am not sure I told you how long I must be away from the College. If I took only the Sunday’s rest, it would be possible for me to reach the Obs. By Tuesday, but I feel the need of more than one day of quiet, before I enter upon the new and incomprehensible life before me . . . William Mitchell died on April 19, 1869 and for the first time, Maria Mitchell was alone. Save for her trip to the southern United States and Europe in 1857 and 1858, her father was always by her side. She did not know much of a day in her life without him nearby and she knows that. It was difficult for her – and her siblings worried about her and this new world she was now in. She had been – expect for that trip – the caregiver for both of her parents. Her mother, Lydia Coleman Mitchell, died in 1861 on Nantucket and Maria had cared for her as well. She was the child who became the caregiver of the family – both in her youth as her siblings sought her out for care, humor, love, and adventures while their mother was busy with younger children and household duties – and then her parents as the only child who did not marry and remained by their sides. JNLF
Show More