Meet our STEM Women Changemakers
- 2 mins read
The winners of the STEM Women Changemakers grant. From L-R: Catherine Royans, Dr Emma Camp, Jerusha Mather, Jessie Panazzolo, Dr Kirsty Nash, Dr Mary McMillan, Professor Tanya M. Smith, Tishiko King, Ruwangi Fernando, Associate Professor Muireann Irish, Dr Momeneh Foroutan, and Dr Marit Kragt
The Academy has announced its inaugural group of twelve STEM Women Changemakers.
From start-up founders to organisational advocates, these women are using their knowledge, experience and networks to share their ideas and solutions for gender equity in Australian science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).
The STEM Changemakers are:
- Dr Emma Camp, DECRA Research Fellow, University of Technology Sydney—who is also the recipient of the Academy’s 2020 Max Day Environmental Science Fellowship Award.
- Ruwangi Fernando, Founder of STEM Sisters
- Dr Momeneh Foroutan, Research Fellow in Computational Cancer Immunotherapy at Monash University
- Associate Professor Muireann Irish, ARC Future Fellow at the University of Sydney
- Tishiko King, Community Support Officer at Indigenous Women in Mining and Resources Australia
- Dr Marit Kragt, Associate Professor at the University of Western Australia
- Jerusha Mather, Phd Candidate at Victoria University
- Dr Mary McMillan, Senior Lecturer in Biomedical Science at the University of New England
- Dr Kirsty Nash, Founder of aKIDemic Life
- Jessie Panazzolo, Founder of Lonely Conservationists
- Catherine Royans, Swift Program Coordinator at the University of Adelaide
- Professor Tanya M. Smith, Professor at Griffith University
Thanks to the generous donation by Professor Michelle Coote of her Georgina Sweet Fellowship, the group will be supported to attend Catalysing Gender Equity 2020, a two-day outcome-driven conference in February guided by the Women in STEM Decadal Plan.
These inaugural STEM Changemakers are listed with thousands of others on STEM Women, an online directory of women in Australia working in STEM.
STEM Women aims to promote gender equity in STEM by enabling a diverse range of women to be offered exciting opportunities to progress their careers and personal capabilities.
More than 2300 women have joined STEM Women and a broad range of people and organisations are using the resource to showcase and access the depth of talent of those working in the field.