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The Story Collider

Barriers: Stories about what stood in our way

The Story Collider

Story Collider, Inc.

Arts, Science, Society & Culture, Personal Journals, Performing Arts

4.4824 Ratings

🗓️ 6 March 2020

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week we present two stories from people who were faced with barriers to their education.

Part 1: Eager to succeed in her Physical Chemistry class, Shaniece Mosley is thrown off by a professor's attempt at a compliment.

Part 2: Lelemia Irvine struggles to get through his PhD program as he's constantly told that his identity as a Native Hawaiian is incompatible with academia.

Shaniece Mosley has been a teacher for eight years, and currently teaches chemistry, AP Chemistry, and science research at Midwood High School in Brooklyn. After attending Northeastern University and SUNYAlbany, where she received a B.S. in Chemistry, she attended Pace University where she earned an M.S. in Secondary Science Education. A former New York City Teaching Fellow, Shaniece is now an MƒA Master Teacher. She enjoys spending free time with her husband Dan and their 2 year old son Greyson.

Lelemia Irvine, PhD, EIT, is kupukaaina, a lineal descendant from the aboriginal families that sprouted out of the land of Waiʻanae, Oʻahu. Dr. Irvine is an Assistant Professor of Physics at the University of Hawaiʻi at West Oʻahu. He is now at his dream job as a professor but the road to get there was not a breeze. Dr. Irvine is the first Kāne Kanaka ʻŌiwi (Native Hawaiian male) to earn a PhD in Civil and Environmental Engineering program at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa in 2019. In his doctoral research, he studied the physics of stormwater within a bioswale using predictive and computational approaches. As far as we know, presently there are less than 10 Native Hawaiians with a PhD in any engineering discipline in the world. Dr. Irvine is a self-described Rain Farmer, a term he coined, when his father, who has dementia, ask him “boy, what you studying in school?”. As a rain farmer, he seeks to connect sky to aquifer thru the physics of fluids and indigenous engineering ways of knowing. Dr. Irvine shares his personal journey as an empowerment tool for others to co-navigate and constellate the village of higher education systems.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

A science story, huh?

0:04.0

Is NYU scientist the...

0:06.0

I felt...

0:07.0

I felt right.

0:08.0

And I just thought, well...

0:10.0

It was that golden moment.

0:12.0

Because science was on my side.

0:15.0

...theid... Hello, everyone. Welcome to the Story Collider, where we bring you true personal stories about science.

0:35.3

I am your host, Aaron Barker, and I'm on my own today, as my intrepid

0:40.3

companion, Liz Neely, is currently in Australia, doing Australian things. But the show must go on.

0:47.4

So this week, we're presenting stories about the ways in which some people are ignored, dismissed,

0:52.9

and actively told they don't belong in science.

0:55.3

The title of this episode is Barriers.

0:59.0

Over the years, we've had a lot of stories on the podcast about imposter syndrome.

1:03.5

That feeling that you are an imposter, that you don't belong or deserve success.

1:08.9

Imposter syndrome has been found to be more prevalent in high achievers

1:12.2

and in women and underrepresented racial, ethnic, and religious minorities. It can come from

1:18.1

our own feelings of self-doubt, for sure, but I think sometimes it's worth thinking about whether

1:23.0

those feelings of inadequacy are coming from within you or from a toxic environment around you,

1:29.1

which is why I love this article by neuroscience PhD student Christine Liu in Quartz,

1:34.6

called Imposter Syndrome isn't the problem. toxic workplaces are. As Christine points out,

1:40.6

it's easy to have imposter syndrome if the people around you are treating you like,

...

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