STEM identities and being a woman in stem takes me back to senior OJ’s 💭 just six strong and intelligent females pursuing a career in STEM with not only faith in ourselves but faith within each other 😤✌🏽#sbSTEM20
As a woman, I’ve learned my right have grown. But at the same time, I’ve learned that just because my rights have grown, it doesn’t mean my voice has. I hope growth comes to know woman and young girls do indeed have a voice and it’s strong 💪 #sbSTEM20
Beautiful ending to #ISCORE2020 ❤️
Proud to represent science bound with a few others to participate in the 2020-2021 ISCORE NCORE cohort!!! Thanks to Science Bound for motivating me to accept and grow with this opportunity ❤️💛 #sbSTEM20
@crjones121 For me personally I think it comes from lack of knowledge and understanding. Just because someone understands a person of colors personality doesn’t cover the fact they don’t understand the culture and how something small they say about their culture could be a racist remark
“When discussing complex institutional dynamics such as racism, consider that I don’t agree may actually mean I don’t understand” If you don’t understand my ethnicity, then why speak on it 🤔🤷🏽♀️ #sbSTEM20
Classism goes hand in hand with being a science bound scholar, I’m not just here at isu because of my scholarship, I’m here because of my hard work in high school in which led me up to the tasks of college 😤🙌🏽 #sbSTEM20
“You can only be oppressed if you let yourself be oppressed”this quote is very definitive but at the same lacks clarification. To start it sends a strong message, but at the same time doesn’t support the idea that someone may or may not have a voice in a certain setting #sbSTEM20
While it is understandable to be labeled within a group, why can’t we all just be labeled as human and as people despite the race, religion or sexuality we are? #sbSTEM20
@jessica_ram19 Whether or not someone is “enough” of something to be considered black or Mexican or anything just because they were or were not raised in that specific culture