Out in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics
Out in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics, Inc., abbreviated oSTEM, is a 501(c)(3) non-profit professional society dedicated to LGBTQ+ individuals within the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) community.
Out in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics, Incorporated | |
Formation | 2005 |
---|---|
Founder | Eric Patridge, PhD |
Type | Nonprofit |
Headquarters | Michigan, USA |
Area served | International |
Executive Director and CEO | Lilian Martinez |
President | Matthew Welmers |
Subsidiaries | Queer in AI |
Staff | 3 |
Volunteers | 90 |
Website | https://www.ostem.org/ |
History
editIn October of 2005. IBM sponsored a focus group where students from across the United States convened at the Human Rights Campaign headquarters in Washington, D.C. These students discussed topics relevant to LGBTQ+ communities at their colleges and universities. They debated how to structure an organization that serves students in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.[1]
Founded in 2009, the organization was granted 501(c)(3) status in 2010. oSTEM currently consists of more than 100 chapters across the United States and the United Kingdom.
Mission
editoSTEM strives to identify, address, and advocate for the needs of LGBTQ+ students and professionals within the STEM fields. oSTEM fulfills these needs by providing networking opportunities, mentorship connections, strategic collaborations, and professional/leadership development, as well as an annual global conference.[2][3]
Activities
editConferences
editoSTEM hosts annual conferences[4][5] that discuss LGBTQ+ topics in STEM as well as intelligence fields.[6] Topics discussed include inclusion, outreach, and diversity within the workplace.[7][8] The goal of workshops, talks, and networking events for LGBTQ+ people is to help them integrate and move up in their fields.[9] The fourth annual conference was hosted jointly with the National Organization of Gay and Lesbian Scientists and Technical Professionals' Out to Innovate in Atlanta in 2014.[10]
LGBT STEM Day
editOn July 5, 2018, oSTEM along with Pride in STEM,[11] House of STEM,[12] and InterEngineering[13] created international awareness for LGBTQ+ people in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math.[14]
Awards
editoSTEM presents a variety of awards annually to individuals and organizations that demonstrate a strong dedication to advancing and empowering LGBTQ+ in STEM fields.[15]
oSTEM Volunteer of the Year Award
editAccording to the oSTEM website, "This award recognizes volunteers who have gone above and beyond to bring oSTEM to new heights in the last year. The Executive Board recognizes volunteers who have demonstrated their drive to achieve great things and push our organization to grow. In the past, awardees have been recognized for creating our scholarship program, spearheading the pivot to an online format for our cornerstone event during COVID, cultivating and expanding institutional support for professional members and collegiate members, and stepping into leadership roles with grace and professionalism. oSTEM is powered by the hard work and commitment of our volunteers."[16]
Previous awardees include:
- Janine van Niekerk (2017)
- Lilian Martinez and Sindhu Sreedhar (2018)
- Christian Alonso (2019)
- AJ Bryant (2020)
- Abby Ray (2021)
- M Wittkop (2022)
- Zia Bresnahan (2023)
oSTEM Global STEM Service Award
editThe oSTEM Global STEM Service Award is given to present and past oSTEM members who show strong dedication to inclusion, diversity, and equality for LGBTQ+ and other marginalized individuals in STEM fields.[17]
Awardees are:
- Dr. Eric Patridge (2013)
- Dr. Elena Long (2014)
- Emily Li (2015)
- Marjorie Willner (2016)
- Elise Wantling (2017)
- Aaron F. Mertz (2018)
- Avery Cunningham (2019)
- Cel Welsh (2020)
- Lee Trent (2021)
- Angie Gonzalez (2022)
oSTEM Strategic Alliance Award
editThe oSTEM Strategic Alliance Award is presented to a current sponsoring organization, community partner, or grant provider of oSTEM who demonstrates strong dedication, engagement, and support to oSTEM and its values.
Awardees are:
- Alcoa (2015)
- US Intelligence Community (IC Pride) (2016)
- Accenture (2017)
- Boeing (2018)
- Ford Motor Company (2019)
- Lockheed Martin (2020)
- Raytheon (2021)
- Ansys (2022)
oSTEM Partner Excellence Award
editThe oSTEM Partner Excellence Award is presented to individuals associated with oSTEM accomplished in their much academic or professional lives who regularly advocate for the full inclusion of people of all marginalized identities.
Awardees are:
- Gib Murray - Raytheon (2015)
- Wolfgang Sigmund - University of Florida (2016)
- Steve Riley - NASA (2017)[18]
- Lianna Newman - ConsenSys/Out in Tech (2018)
- Beau Williams - Boeing (2019)
- Stuart Duncan - University of Connecticut (2021)
- Casady Wyckoff - Boeing (2022)
Overall Student Chapter of the Year
editThe Overall Student Chapter of the Year is given to oSTEM chapters that educate, empower, and engage a diverse community. These chapters contrihelp a lot with finding LGBTQ students in the STEM community, helping them, and speaking up for themselves are:
- oSTEM at University of Kansas (2016)
- oSTEM at New York University (2017)
- oSTEM at Colorado School of Mines (2018)
- oSTEM at UC San Diego (2019)
Rookie Student Chapter of the Year
editThe Rookie Student Chapter of the Year celebrates achievements by oSTEM chapters that have been founded within two years of application submission.
Awardees are:
- oSTEM at University of Michigan (2016)
- oSTEM at University of Minnesota (2017)
- oSTEM at University of Arkansas (2018)
- oSTEM at Howard University (2019)
Chapters
editThere are over 100 chapters affiliated with the parent organization. Chapters are organized into six geographic regions (A–F) and a region that encompasses all chapters dedicated specifically to graduate students.
Student Chapters
editThe six regions are:
- Region A
- Region B
- Region C
- Region D
- Region E
- Region F
- Region G
- Grad region
- All graduate student chapters, regardless of geographic location
Professional Chapters
editThe first professional chapter is currently being tested in the Boston metropolitan area. In 2020, there was a shift to a virtual professional chapter with members in the United States and United Kingdom, with a number of smaller in-person events occurring in those two regions.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "A Look at oSTEM: Out as LGBT+ in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics". Archived from the original on 2018-02-22. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "New UC San Diego Chapter Sends LGBT+ Delegates to OSTEM Conference". Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "About OSTEM". Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "National Conference Discusses Being Out in STEM". Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "LGBTQ-Focused OSTEM Holds Seventh Annual Conference". 14 December 2017. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "CIA Serves as Corporate Sponsor for National LGBT Conference". Archived from the original on February 19, 2013. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "FAU Student Speaks on Overcoming Adversity at 2015 National oSTEM Conference". Retrieved 2018-09-24.
- ^ "New UC San Diego Chapter Sends LGBT+ Delegates to OSTEM Conference". Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "UNL student creates oSTEM chapter to focus on LGBTQ community in STEM fields". 29 September 2017. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "oSTEM and NOGLSTP joint meeting". Retrieved 2018-09-24.
- ^ "PRIDE IN STEM, A charitable trust for LGBT+ in Science, Engineering, Tech, and Maths". Retrieved 2018-09-24.
- ^ "HOUSE of STEM, A network of LGBTQ+ scientists in Ireland". Retrieved 2018-09-24.
- ^ "InterEngineering, Connecting, Informing and Empowering LGBT+ engineers and supporters". Retrieved 2018-09-24.
- ^ "THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL DAY OF LGBTQ+ PEOPLE IN SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING, AND MATHS; JULY 5TH, 2018". Retrieved 2018-09-24.
- ^ "oSTEM Annual Awards". Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "Awards - 14th Annual oSTEM Conference". conference.ostem.org. Retrieved 2024-05-31.
- ^ "Coming out and standing up for others". 20 November 2017. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "Steve Riley named 2017 oSTEM Partner Excellence award winner". Retrieved 2018-09-24.
External links
edit- Shawn Wasserman, "National Conference Discusses Being Out in STEM" 11/10/2014
- Hal Marz, University Programs, "oSTEM 2013 at the Google NYC Office" 2/6/2014
- Camille Crittenden, Contributor, "Tech Pride: Celebrations and Challenges for LGBT Members of the Tech Community" 6/19/2017
- Sarah Scoles, Science, "HOW QUEER SCIENTISTS ARE SHAPING THEIR FUTURE WITH A SURVEY" 7/26/16
- Han Wang, Staff Writer, "For All the QT’s in Science" 4/17/2017
- Barbara Moran, "LGBTQ+ issues in STEM diversity" Archived 2018-03-10 at the Wayback Machine 6/15/2017
- Tatiana Zhelezniakova, "A Look at oSTEM: Out as LGBT+ in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics" Archived 2017-06-17 at the Wayback Machine 12/10/2016
- oSTEM Official site