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Katherine Johnson

Eulalie Michel

Created on May 1, 2023

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Transcript

Katherine johnson: First black women to work in the nasa

Start

by Eulalie

Index

01

Childhood & Personal Life

02

Her Career at NASA

03

Her Achievements

04

Awards and Legacy

05

Conclusion

06

Thanks

Childhood & Personal Life

Childood: •Born the 26th of August 1918 in White Sulphut Springs, West Virginia under the name of Creola Katherine Coleman •Very talented in mathematics •Went through a lot of racism in high school

Education: •Graduated at 14 years old •Attended to the West Virginia State College •Found a mentor in math at 18 => Professor W. W. Schieffelin Claytor

Personal Life: •Married to James Goble from 1939 to 1956 •Married to James Johnson from 1959 to 2019, with who she had 3 daughters •Found a job as a teacher in black school in Virginia in 1937

Her career in NASA

•Joined the National Advisory Comittee for Aeronautics (NACA)=>Hired as a "human computer" •Wasn't respected because she was a black women •Had more works given but wasn't recognized for it •Thanks to her contributions, she opened the way for women and colored people in the NASA

Her achievement

In 1960: She and Ted Skopinski coauthored "Determination of Azimuth Angle at Burnout for Placing a Satellite Over a Selected Earth Position" => first time a woman in the FRD received credits as a researcher for the mission In 1957 her contributions were vital to success many missions as: •The first human spaceflight by an American (Alan Shepard) •The Apollo 11 mission that landed humans on the moon

Awards and Legacy

Helped to inspire a new generation of black women and people to pursue careers in STEM fields

STEM Fields

Presidential Medal of Freedom

2015: President Barack Obama awarded her an America’s highest civilian honor.

Hidden Figures

2016: Movie about 3 black women working in the Nasa, in the shadow

Congressional Gold Medal

2019: appreciation for her distinguished achievements and contributions

Conclusion

Katherine Johnson was a strong women who finally got her and her work rightfully recognized. She was an American hero. She passed away the 24th of February 2020 at the age of 101 years old. The NASA administrator James Bridenstine made a speech on her honor to pay her tribute.

Thanks!

Sources: nasa.gov wikipedia.org science.nasa.gov