Cindy Patton

Girlstart’s Women in STEM weekly series highlights various women who are making a difference in STEM. Be inspired as these incredible women describe how they became interested in their field, provide insight into a day in the life, and share learnings from their experiences.

Cindy Patton

Senior Systems Engineer @ Allscripts

Cindy is a long time volunteer and council member at Girlstart. After a great career as a Systems Engineer, she is now wanting to share her talents with younger girls, and we are so happy to have her on the blog today!

What would you like to tell girls who are interested in a STEM career?
There are an amazing variety of choices out there. You don’t have to be stuck in any job or field or city or state. You are smart; Use your brain and some heart to find what makes you happy.

Was there a specific person or program in your life that encouraged you to pursue STEM?
I have been an engineer for 42 years, started when very few women were engineers. I had great high school math and science teachers, both male and female. The word problems in Math– are usually favorites of engineering minds.

Why is confidence in STEM important for girls?
Women are still in the minority in technical fields, your ideas and thoughts can be easily dismissed if not expressed in a confident manner. The world needs more women in STEM; We have many talents and we can make a difference.

Briefly describe your career as a Systems Engineer.
I could also be called a Linux systems Admin. I manage a few sets of computers that use a variety of UNIX operating systems to provide software solutions to Allscripts clients.

What are your favorite things about your career?
Flexibility of employment – I have worked government research, manufacturing, higher education, engineering consulting, semiconductor manufacturing, power industry, and most recently Healthcare IT.

Lisa Ward, PhD

Girlstart’s Women in STEM weekly series highlights various women who are making a difference in STEM. Be inspired as these incredible women describe how they became interested in their field, provide insight into a day in the life, and share learnings from their experiences.

Lisa Ward, PhD

Program Manager @ AMD

Lisa was initially drawn into Girlstart because of our hands-on, collaborative education environment. Today, she is joining our Women In STEM blog series to discuss her career as a Program Manager and share her advice for the next generation.

Was there a specific person, program, or event in your life that led you to STEM?
I grew up with parents and teachers who believed in me and supported me with fun, challenging ways to grow my knowledge and love of math and physics. I especially enjoyed programs like MathCounts and Science Bowl.

Can you describe your career, and what you like about it?
My work combines electrical engineering, project management, statistical analysis, and communications. I work with colleagues across many teams to support collaboration on data projects. I also help share new tools and processes from those projects with all our teams. I really love sharing ideas and working with other people, and I love solving problems. Working in program management, I get to do both of those things in an engineering context. My favorite thing is that my work combines all of these together.

What would you like to tell girls who are interested in pursuing a STEM career?
Follow your interests. If you daydream about how something works, how to solve a problem, how to make something better, or why something behaves the way it does, then pay attention. That something may be your something. Seek out opportunities to explore that area more.

Why is confidence in STEM important for girls?
No matter what you do, you will make mistakes. It’s okay. Mistakes are part of learning. Mistakes are part of discovery. Mistakes are part of creation. But mistakes are also really frustrating and disheartening. Confidence is important because it helps you get past the mistakes. Confidence makes you try again so you can learn, discover, and create.

Starry Night at Home: Greek Columns

Triangle, circle, or square—which column shape is the strongest? Investigate the design decisions behind one of the Ancient Greeks’ most famous and recognizable architectural structures!

*We recommend that you do this activity before “Parthenon Architecture”

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