info@iitagne.org

Past Events

The Women Who Mapped the Stars

 

Where: Central Square Theater, Cambridge MA
When: May 12th Play at 3:00 pm followed by discussion session from 5:00 to 6:00 pm  

IIT AGNE in partnership with Central Square Theater brings you a special performance and discussion on May 12th.  The play about late 1800s, Harvard College Observatory “Computers” – women employed for half a man’s salary to analyze astronomic data — show us that the universe is larger than we ever dreamed. The thrilling story of five women who changed the way astronomers saw the universe.  

For this special performance, get a 25% discount on Tier A and B tickets for Adults and Seniors by typing the discount code IITAGNE in the discount code box, in the top right corner on the tickets page. Students under 18 are $16 and above 18 are $21. Discounted tickets are limited to 4 per individual and the theater is filling fast.
More info on the play 

Following the performance, we will have an engaging panel discussion 

Mapping a Path Today: Roles and Challenges

When: Saturday May 12, 2018 at 5 pm 

‘The Women Who Mapped the Stars’ describes the lives and accomplishments of five women employed at the Harvard College Observatory over a century ago. They worked at half a man’s salary and in their shadow. Despite the huge strides women have made since, the challenges faced by the women in the play seem just as relevant today.

How do we continue on our path of progress for the next generation? How can we ensure that women bring their full potential to, and, benefit from humanity’s science and technology-driven future?

These are questions we invite the audience to discuss following the matinee performance of Van Dyke’s play led by a dynamic panel including the playwright, Joyce Van Dyke and several voices from the science community to share their experiences and provoke.

We encourage you to bring your young scholars aspiring to be scientists, astronomers and technologists to this engaging event. Though the panel discussion is free, seating is limited, and reservations are required. Please RSVP online on the Theater website.

Speakers

Joyce Van Dyke

Regina Jorgenson

Meenakshi Narain

Raji Patel

Joyce Van Dyke

Joyce Van Dyke, Playwright

Joyce Van Dyke’s The Women Who Mapped the Stars, commissioned by Central Square Theater, is receiving its world premiere April 19 – May 20, as the inaugural production of the Brit D’Arbeloff Women in Science Production Series.

Running simultaneously is the off-Broadway premiere of Daybreak, the story of two women friends in the aftermath of the Armenian genocide, produced by Pan Asian Repertory Theatre, with the support of a major grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (Beckett Theatre at Theatre Row, April 21 – May13.)  Joyce’s other plays include The Oil Thief, commissioned by the Ensemble Studio Theatre / Sloan Project, produced by Boston Playwrights’ Theatre and winner of the Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding New Script (2009). A Girl’s War was produced by Golden Thread Productions (2009), New Repertory Theatre (2003), and Boston Playwrights’ Theatre (2001), and won the Gassner Award and the Boston Globe’s “Top Ten” plays of 2001. In 2015, she was commissioned by the Armenian Heritage Foundation to write a site-specific play, Friends of Armenia, that was produced at Boston’s historic Faneuil Hall.

Joyce has been awarded residencies from the MacDowell Colony, the Huntington Theatre Playwriting Fellows program, and Central Square Theater’s PlayPen. She teaches playwriting and Shakespeare at Northeastern and Harvard. www.joycevandyke.comJoyce 

Regina Jorgenson

Regina Jorgenson, Director, Maria Mitchell Obervatory

Born and raised in California, Regina first came to the Nantucket Maria Mitchell Association as a National Science Foundation Research Experience for Undergraduates (NSF-REU) intern under the tutelage of former Director of Astronomy, Dr. Vladimir Strelnitski. This formative experience helped inspire her to make a career out of her love for astronomy.

After completing her B.S. degree in Physics, Regina won a Thomas J. Watson Foundation Fellowship that supported her in a year-long adventure travelling around the world and investigating the effects of culture on science through the eyes of women astronomers.

In 1999, Regina returned to the MMA as the Assistant Director of Astronomy until 2002 when she left to pursue graduate studies in California. Regina earned her Ph.D. in Physics at UC San Diego, specializing in studies of galaxy formation and evolution. She continued this work as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Cambridge and then won a prestigious National Science Foundation Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship that she took to the Institute for Astronomy at the University of Hawai’i. There she used the largest optical telescopes in the world to obtain the first spectral images of normal galaxies in the early Universe.

Regina was a Visiting Assistant Professor of Physics at Willamette University in Oregon, before returning to Nantucket as the Director of the Maria Mitchell Observatory in 2016. 

Meenakshi Narain

Prof. Meenakshi Narian, Professor of Physics, Brown University 

 Professor Meenakshi Narain’s research interests are in experimental high energy physics and her ultimate goal is to illuminate the character of physics at the TeV energy scale. At the loftiest level, it is part of the age-old quest of mankind to understand where we come from and why we are here.  Meenakshi Narain has been involved with the CMS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN (Geneva, Switzerland) and the DØ experiment at Fermilab (Batavia, IL). She was instrumental in the discovery of the top quark in 1995, which is the heaviest fundamental particle and as heavy as an Osmium atom. 

Narain continues her quest at the LHC with the CMS experiment. In 2012, Narain’s group had significant involvement in the discovery of the Higgs Boson.  Narain continues her quest at the LHC with the CMS experiment. In 2012, Narain’s group had significant involvement in the discovery of the Higgs Boson.

Prof. Meenakshi Narain received her PhD in physics from the State University of New York at Stony Brook. She joined the Brown faculty in 2007 having previously taught at Boston University. In Jan 2013, Narain was appointed the coordinator of Fermilab’s LHC Physics Center for CMS, where she has promoted collaboration with colleagues from South America, Europe, India, and Iran, in a peaceful quest for knowledge.

Narain is a Fellow of the American Physical Society. She has been a Wilson Fellow at Fermilab and has received a Professional Opportunities for Women in Research and Education grant, Major Research Infrastructure grants, and the CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation. She is also a recipient of the Outstanding Junior Investigator Award from the US Department of Energy. Her current research is supported by the DOE. She is a co-author on about 400 peer-reviewed journals and has given numerous public lectures and invited conference presentations.

Raji Patel

Moderated by Raji Patel, Co-Director MIT NASA Space Grant Program 

 Raji Patel is the Co-Director of the MA Space Grant Consortium, a network of colleges and universities, based at MIT, to conduct NASA’s education mission.  

In this role, she works with universities and colleges in MA. She also engages with industry and the state government to promote STEM education and provide research funding to students across Massachusetts. Annually, she conducts a program at the Kennedy Space Center for MIT seniors and graduate students to enable them to learn about the operations at NASA.  

She was awarded the grant for the NASA (K-12) Summer of Innovation initiative. MA was one of four states to receive the award nationally, and she served as Director for the programs in Massachusetts including the high school scientific ballooning program, rocketry for high school girls, and teacher professional development in robotics  

Previously, she has worked as a financial and business manager in organizations in the U.S. and abroad, including Wellesley College, Price Waterhouse and the Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India. 

She received a bachelor’s degree in physics in India and a master’s degree in finance from MIT.

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Boston’s Robotics Revolution – Learn about it!

Robots coupled with AI are already permeating our lives in a variety of ways: from consumer robots that clean our houses to industrial robots that make our cars; from robots that take care of our elderly to drones that fight our wars. Should we fear them? Probably not. But we need to better understand their impact on our work and future. Boston is the second fastest growing robotics technology cluster in the US. Join us for an afternoon of learning with leading experts. Our expert panel of robotics practitioners will educate you on the state of the technology and what the future holds. The MIT Cheetah is an example of what will be discussed.

Where:

Cambridge Innovation Center,
Havana Conf. room, 5th Floor,
1 Broadway, Cambridge MA

When:

Saturday, April 21st, 2018 1:45 PM – 5 PM

Panelists


Register

Co-sponsored by MassRobotics
Space Courtesy CIC Cambridge


CIC

Tom Ryden

Marc Raibert

Sangbae Kim

Shiraj Sen

Krishna SriKrishna

Vivek Badami

Tom Ryden

Tom Ryden, Executive Director, MassRobotics 

 Prior to joining MassRobotics Mr. Ryden was the founder and CEO/COO of VGo Communications, Inc.   While at VGo Mr. Ryden oversaw the development and launch of the VGo telepresence robot. The VGo is used by hospitals, eldercare facilities, schools and other organizations to help people stay better connected, allowing users to essentially be in two places at once.

Previously, Mr. Ryden was Director of Sales & Marketing at iRobot Corporation.  Under his leadership iRobot secured over $300M in contracts and revenue from its government and industrial products increased from $2M to over $80M annually.   In addition Mr. Ryden held roles in program management, overseeing the development of some of iRobot’s most successful products.

Mr. Ryden serves as the co-chairman of the robotics cluster of the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council and is on the board of directors of AUVSI New England and the Robotics Technology Advisory Panel for ASME.  Mr. Ryden has a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Vermont and an MBA from Bentley University.

Marc Raibert

Founder and CEO of Boston Dynamics

Marc Raibert is founder and CEO of Boston Dynamics, a company that creates some of the world’s most advanced dynamic robots, such as BigDog, Atlas, Spot and Handle. These robots are inspired by the remarkable ability of animals to move with agility, dexterity, perception and intelligence. A key ingredient of these robots is their dynamic behavior, which contributes to their effectiveness and versatility in the real world. Before starting Boston Dynamics, Raibert was Professor of Computer Science and Robotics at MIT and Carnegie Mellon. While at CMU and MIT Raibert founded the Leg Laboratory, a lab that helped establish the scientific basis for highly dynamic robots and that set the stage for the work done at Boston Dynamics. Raibert is a member of the National Academy of Engineering.

Sangbae Kim

Sangbae Kim, Director of the Bio-mimetic Robotics Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Professor Kim’s research focuses on the bio-inspired robot design by extracting principles from animals. Kim’s achievements on bio-inspired robot development include the world’s first directional adhesive inspired from gecko lizards, and a climbing robot, Stickybot, that utilizes the directional adhesives to climb smooth surfaces featured in TIME’s best inventions in 2006. Recent achievement includes the development of the MIT Cheetah capable of stable outdoor running up to 13mph and autonomous jumping over obstacles at an efficiency of animals. This achievement was covered by more than 300 media articles. He is a recipient of best paper award from International Conference on Robotics and Automation (2007), King-Sun Fu Memorial Transactions on Robotics (2008) and IEEE/ASME transactions on mechatronics (2016), DARPA Young Faculty Award (2013), NSF CAREER award (2014), and Ruth and Joel Spira Award for Distinguished Teaching (2015).

Professor Kim has a Ph d and M.S. in robotics from Stanford University and a bachelor’s in mechanical engineering from Yonsei University.

Shiraj Sen

Shiraj Sen, Lead scientist, GE Global Research

 As part of the GE Robotics team, Sen is responsible for research, development, and deployment of real-world systems for aerial and ground robots. Since 2014, Sen has worked closely with customers and multi-disciplinary teams to shape robotics projects and products in the oil & gas, power, and transportation sectors. His main areas of interest include robot learning, robot planning, computer vision, and certification of autonomous systems. He has been actively involved in the creation of two new robotics-enabled businesses at GE and has filed over a dozen patent disclosures.

Prior to joining GE, Sen was a postdoctoral fellow in the UMass Amherst College of Information and Computer Sciences Robotics Lab and worked with NASA to develop robotic learning techniques, including teaching robots to make decisions under uncertainty. He recently continued his work with NASA, winning second place in the agency’s Space Robotics Challenge. The competition tasked teams with developing software to increase the autonomy of NASA’s R5 robots so they can complete specific tasks during space travel or after landing on other planets.

Sen earned a B.S. in mathematics and computing from the Indian Institute of Technology at Kharagpur in 2004 and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in computer science from the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 2007 and 2012, respectively.

Krishna SriKrishna

Krishna Srikrishna, Sr. Member of Technical Staff. iRobot

Krishna has more than 20 years of engineering leadership experience developing innovative high-volume products with leading-edge technology.  Krishna is passionate about productizing robotics technology and he has been successful at de-risking product launch by leveraging pragmatic solutions that deliver tangible business value.  He has been at iRobot for the past 8 years where he led software development teams working on cloud connected Roombas with smart home autonomous navigation and mapping technology.  He has worked in many industries including consumer robotics, internet of things (IOT),  RFID and data storage industries. Krishna has a Ph. D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Prior to that he earned a Masters from The Ohio State University and a B. Tech from the Indian Institute of Technology.

Vivek Badami

Vivek Badami, Consulting Engineer, General Electric (Panel Moderator)

Vivek is responsible for new sensor technology development at GE Aviation. He has over 40 years’ experience in sensors, Monitoring & Diagnostics, Prognostics & Health Monitoring, & automation technologies in a variety of products and process applications in the Energy and Aviation space. He has subject matter expertise in a variety of sensor technologies, data acquisition, algorithms & architectures. He has 51 patents in these technologies.

Vivek earned his Bachelor’s in Electrical Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, Masters in Robotics from the University of Rhode Island, and PhD in Intelligent Systems from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

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Establishing partnerships to ensure success for aspiring women in STEM

Date: 4th February, 2018
Venue: MIT, Cambridge, MA

This workshop will provide a forum for advocates of women working towards building STEM careers to collaborate with industry and university leaders on crafting a strategy for paving the path for continued success of women in STEM at the undergraduate level and beyond. There will be keynote speakers and interactive brainstorming sessions. Note: We are seeking active advocates willing to sign up to be mentors/provide internship opportunities for Women in STEM or participate in other related roles.

Please contact mandy.pant@gmail.com or ranjani.saigal@gmail.com for additional information.

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IITAGNE Annual General Body Meeting

The next General Body Meeting for IITAGNE will be held on Saturday November 4th from 2 to 4 pm at the Acton Memorial Library, 486 Main St. Acton MA..

The Agenda for the meeting will consist of:

  1. Introduce EC members
  2. Annual report of IITAGNE activities
  3. Financial Report
  4. Election to fill one VP position (preferably from IIT Delhi).
    • Nominations will be made from the floor.
    • Nominees will need to be present.
  5. Next year plans and ideas
  6. Open discussion
  7. Light snacks will be served. We will be starting proceedings promptly at 2 PM.

Please RSVP by clicking the RSVP button below, if you would be attending so we can make appropriate arrangements for seating and snacks.

 

RSVP

 

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Exploring the Universe with Gravitational Waves – March 25, 2017

Einstein predicted gravitational waves within his theory of gravity, general relativity. It took 100 years to prove his theory. And the credit goes to Dr Rainer Weiss, Professor of Physics emeritus at MIT’s Department of Physics. Nearly 50 years ago, Dr Weiss dreamed up a way to detect these gravitational waves, infinitesimal ripples in space-time.

IITAGNE and Sangam are honored to have Dr Weiss talk about Gravitational Waves and the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO).


When:
Saturday, March 25, 2017, 2 – 4 PM
Where: MIT Building 26, Room 26-100.

Dr Weiss is best known for inventing the laser interferometric technique which is basic to the operation of LIGO.  Currently there are two operating LIGO’s, one in Louisiana and another in Washington.  Additional LIGOs are under construction, including a plan to build a LIGO in India.

Read more about Dr Rainer Weiss and his accomplishments in this ScienceMag article from AAAS. Also read this Washington Post article about the discovery.

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Workshop on Managing Successful Career Transitions On November 09, 2016 at Tufts University, Medford, MA

Event: Managing Successful Career Transitions.

Host: IIT-AGNE-Women’s Group

When: Wed, Nov 9, 2016

Time:   6:00 -9:00 pm
6:00 -7:00 Network and Light Dinner
7:00  – Keynote talk
7:45 – 8:30 – Q&A

Where – Nelson Auditorium, Anderson Hall, Tufts University, 200 College Ave, Medford, MA 02155

Light Dinner Will Be Provided.

Cost: $5

To buy tickets please go to

http://www.lokvani.com/lokvani/cal.php?stage=1&event_id=13012

Why you should attend: You are a unique individual, full of energy and potential to follow and accomplish your dream career. Whether you’re just leaving school, finding opportunities limited in your current position or, like many in this economy, facing unemployment, it may be time to consider your career path. Sometimes it can seem very overwhelming to figure out which next step to take.  Our keynote speaker will help you think through your options and provide suggestions on resources to help you get to your goal.

Who should attend? : The event will be a women focused event. However all are welcome to attend.

About the speaker: 

Anjali Sidhu is a results-oriented Talent Acquisition specialist with vast years of progressive experience in Information Technology industry. She works on managing relations across businesses and Talent Acquisition teams, establishing ongoing relationships with hiring managers in order to understand their business and recruitment needs and fill their open positions in a timely manner. She is also works on effectively building talent communities through various channels; Social Media (LinkedIn, Plaxo, Facebook, Twitter, Blogs).

She will provide insights from her perspective as a hiring manager.

 

For more information please send email to

Mandy Pant  – Mandy.pant@gmail.com

Ranjani Saigal – ranjani.saigal@ekal.org

 

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IIT AGNE Elections on November 19, 2016, 2.00-4.00PM @Burlington Public Library, Rm-Fogelberg, Burlington, MA 01803

The two year term of the present Board of Directors and the Executive committee of IIT AGNE expires in December 2016. The elections will be held during the General Body Meeting on Saturday, November 19. Please mark your calendar. The nomination for the election of office bearers are due by November 6, 2016.

When: November 19, 2016
Time: 2.00-4.00 PM
Where: Burlington Public Library, Rm-Fogelberg, Burlington, MA 01803

Please RSVP here if you would attend the election process. Its required for seating and snacks arrangements.

RSVP: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/rsvp-for-attending-iitagneelection-on-nov-19-2016-tickets-29269482811

The IIT AGNE elections will be conducted by the Election Committee comprising of Subhash Varshney, Ravi Rastogi and Anil Saigal.  IIT AGNE Thanks them for graciously agreeing to be on the election committee. They have communicated election rules, process and other details. You can also find below the same-

IITAGNE (Indian Institute of Technology Association of New England) will hold election for the next Executive Committee on November 19th, 2016.  We are seeking nominations for-

  1. President
  2. Executive Vice President
  3. Secretary
  4. Treasurer
and
Vice President*
Please read by-laws on the website.
Please e-mail your brief bio-data and the nomination to info@iitagne.org or rsrastogi@gmail.comor mr.asaigal@gmail.comor subhash.varshney@gmail.com.
The information should include;Mandatory Information-
  1. Name
  2. Name of IIT institution
  3. Year of graduation
  4. Department
  5. E mail address
Optional information-
  1. Phone No.
  2. Name of Organization where you work
  3. Designation
Please note that in order to seek any position you must be (i) an IIT alumnus or affiliated to IIT in academic or other professional capacity (ii) member of IITAGNE and (iii)be present during election process on November 19, 2016.  Only Life Members, Regular Members and Student Members are  eligible to run for any office position.
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Volunteer Appreciation Event

In appreciation of the volunteers that helped the 2016 Leadership Conference, we are planning a party Stay tuned.

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Summary-Our Connected World and 21st Century Medicine, May 21st, 2016, Cambridge, MA 02142

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Our Connected World and 21st Century Medicine: Report

 

Can your insurance company figure out when to send a nurse to your aging parents living far away? Can a pathologist remotely access their lab results for a second opinion? Should you be worried someone might hack into their medication delivery pump? How is big data being used to develop that medication?

IIT AGNE conducted a fascinating panel discussion on the world of connected devices and big data; the differences they are making in the healthcare community, as well as the new security challenges that arise.

The event which was held on May 21, 2016 at the Cambridge Innovation Center included Moji Kashef, Senior Manager – Software Development / R & D, BD Medical; Yogesh Shinde, Vice President, Technology Engineering, OptumInsight / UnitedHealth Group and Shekhar Wadekar, Managing Member, coSlide LLC.

Moji Kashef started off with a description of the new security challenges that arise when medical devices and software are combined together in novel ways that open up vulnerabilities not seen before. Devices such as insulin pumps and pacemakers are implanted in millions of patients and are accessible to hackers in ways that are unforeseen. Commonly used medical equipment, such as intravenous pumps, is now network enabled to track location and for control.

Panelists:

  • Moji Kashef, Senior Manager – Software Development/R & D, BD Medical
  • Yogesh Shinde, Vice President, Technology Engineering, OptumInsight/UnitedHealth Group
  • Shekhar Wadekar, Managing Member, coSlide LLC

 

 

Brief Bio:

Moji Kashef, Senior Manager – Software Development / R&D, BD Medical
Moji Kashef has held 15+ years of leadership positions in software, test (V & V), system requirements, hardware, configuration and release management, and computer system validation (CSV) on various products. His accomplishments include: Delivery of software for Insulin Delivery Device & BLE enabled handheld controller (Work in progress) including Product Security Assessments, High Volume Automated Assembly System, high volume data analytics and storage system with web portals, High Resolution Vision Inspection System, Lab Automation, X-Ray Fluorescent elemental analysis instruments, medical visualization platform with single use endoscopy device, VoIP Media Gateway, Storage Network Processor, Airline Baggage Image-Screening Security, and various networking and connectivity architectures  (IoT). Moji has extensive working experience in establishing quality processes for Design Controls, Phased/Gated Development Life Cycle, FMEAs, vendor audits, CMMI, AAMI IEC 62304:2006, ISO 13485, ISO 14971, 21 CFR Part 11.

Yogesh Shinde, Vice President, Technology Engineering, OptumInsight / UnitedHealth Group
Yogesh Shinde has been working in the Healthcare Industry for over 8 years, leading software product development for  Healthcare applications at Optum including Analytics and other applications. Over these 8 years Yogesh has observed the industry significantly transform with significant adoption of EMRs, population health analytics, and coming together of Provider and Payers through ACO and other Risk Based models. All of this with significant contribution from software and other technologies including Mobile, Big Data and Cloud Computing.
Shekhar Wadekar, Managing Member, coSlide LLC
Shekhar Wadekar is the founder of coSlide, LLC, a company developing technology and delivering services for digital telepathology. He has previously served as President and Chief Executive Officer of AccelPath, Inc. a company focused on developing unique 3D optical imaging technology and telemedicine workflow. Prior to that he was President and CEO of Traxyz Medical, Inc., a development stage medical device company that successfully developed an FDA approved low cost stereotactic imaging system for breast biopsy localization. Dr. Wadekar served as an equity research analyst for eight years, following the semiconductor industry and was recognized as a Wall Street Journal “All-Star Analyst.” He was involved in numerous IPOs, and private placements for U.S. and Israeli technology companies. Prior to that, Dr. Wadekar was employed at IBM and worked on optical communications. He also was Technical Coordinator of the IBM/Siemens/Toshiba joint development program in semiconductor memory. He earned his Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the University of Delaware, an M.B.A. from the Stern School of Business at New York University, and a B. Tech from IIT Bombay in Metallurgical Engineering

 

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Summary -Women Advancing STEM, Saturday, April 16, Cambridge, MA 02142

Women Advancing STEM Panel sponsored by IIT Association of Greater New England (IIT AGNE)

IIT AGNE, the IIT Alumni Association of New England held a panel discussion titled Women Advancing STEM on April 16, 2016 at the Cambridge Innovation Center in Cambridge, MA.  The panel was moderated by Rita Advani and featured Chitra Javdekar, Dean of STEM, Mass Bay Community College Kathy Vandiver, Director of the Community Outreach Education and Engagement Core at the Center for Environmental Health Sciences and Mondira Pant, Lead Technologist, Intel Corp.
The event opened with a welcome note by Ranjani Saigal, who shared information about IIT AGNE and the upcoming leadership conference on Aug 12-14.  IIT AGNE, an organization that was started by IIT Alumni, who drawing on their own background and experience in the STEM fields and realizing the importance of STEM education and awareness for the future of the country, created the organization to work within the greater New England community, amongst other things, to help raise awareness of the importance of STEM education and careers within the economy. The organization is not limited to IITians but welcomes everyone who may be interested in STEM.
“At IIT we had very few women.  While our numbers are limited, many of the IIT Alumni have gone on to create great impact in a multitude of fields. We are here today to celebrate the accomplishments of Women in STEM and discuss opportunities and challenges for women in the field of STEM” said Saigal.  IIT AGNE is hosting a leadership conference on Aug 12-14 in Rhode Island. Here is the link to the event. http://www.iitagne.org/. Mondira Pant is the co-chair of the IIT AGNE event. Other core team members of the women’s panel include Dr. Rukmini Vijaykumar and Durriya Doctor.
Rita Advani, the Director for Regional Programming for High Touch High Tech of New England moderated the panel. Each panelist spoke about their journey and talked about how being a woman has been an opportunity and a challenge.  Each journey outlined the influence of mentors in the life of the speakers. For most it was their father who encouraged them to become an engineer.  The panelists discussed the challenge of often being a minority and them needing to work harder than their peers. There were other stories on the positive side of how women could network with women at other institutions to have very productive projects.
The panelists felt strongly that girls in middle school are very important target for STEM educators. Kathy Vandervier used her experience as a science teacher to later on develop LEGO models that could easily explain the concept of DNA to younger students. Chitra Javdekar talked about the courses at community colleges, which could be an excellent opportunity for women who may consider switching into STEM careers. She also cautioned that a STEM career may not be the right option for every girl.
There were many youngsters who had a range of questions from how to engage in research and how to find internship opportunities in the STEM field.  There was a health discussion at the end of the session on how work place rules and attitudes can change to be more accommodative of women who may need to take maternity leave.
The discussions clearly indicated that there is much that still needs to be done if women need to play a larger role in the STEM field.
Panelist Bio’s

Chitra Javdekar

Chitra N. Javdekar is Dean of the Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) at Massachusetts Bay (MassBay) Community College since July 2013. As Dean, she oversees various STEM departments at the College as well as grants, projects, and initiatives. Her office is responsible for managing budgets and activities such as industry collaboration that advance the College’s mission. In addition to developing new academic programs at the college for the college’s traditional and non-traditional student population, she has led the development of several new enrichment and STEM mentoring and outreach programs for K-12 and college students at MassBay in collaboration with community and higher education partners.

Prior to becoming the Dean, Dr. Javdekar served as Department Chair and Professor of Engineering at MassBay.  She holds a M.S. in Civil (Structural) Engineering from Mumbai University, India, and a Ph.D. in Civil (Structural) Engineering from Tufts University, Massachusetts.

Kathleen Mead Vandiver

Kathleen M. Vandiver is presently the director of the Community Outreach Education and Engagement Core (COE2C) for the MIT Center for Environmental Health Sciences (CEHS). She enjoys the position at MIT very much, because it uses both her training in biomedical research and in science education.   Kathy received her PhD from the Tufts Medical School (now the Sackler Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences) and became a principal investigator on NIH and NIEHS grants through the Small Business Innovative Research program (SBIR) in the mid-1980s.  The company earned an R& D 100 Award in MA. Then after several years, in preparation for a new career, she entered Harvard Graduate School of Education to earn a Master’s in Education.

Kathy taught middle school science for 15 years in the Lexington Public Schools before working at MIT.  Her career as an innovative science teacher began with a bold collaboration with her 6th grade Teacher Team at Diamond Middle School.  With Lexington Foundation funding, they produced a project-based curriculum called Horace’s Fridays.  Also while at Diamond Middle School, Kathy designed and developed cell biology manipulatives and lesson plans that were later sold to the LEGO Education Company.  These original models were created from standard LEGO bricks and components.   The key part of the innovation however, was that the models were designed simulate how molecules actually work and interact, unlike most molecular models that are designed as statues.  The Vandiver models can be used to simulate cell processes like DNA transcription and translation that are difficult to learn.  When Kathy joined MIT in 2005, she improved the models further and set up a unique gallery at the MIT Museum for teaching the molecular biology with the LEGO DNA and Proteins to people of all ages.  Kathy now holds an US patent with her husband, J. Kim Vandiver, for the development of the latest DNA and Protein versions that can now be mass produced and distributed.  The DNA sets were released in February this year and the Protein Sets will soon follow this summer.

 

Gitika Srivastava

Founder, Chief Executive Officer, Navya Network (startup for medical decision making) and Partner/Founder KAHM Capital

Gitika graduated in computer science from Harvard University and has an MBA from the MIT Sloan School of Management. She has over fourteen years of experience as an entrepreneur and investor in early stage high tech and health care companies. Gitika was the CEO of Skyris Networks, which was acquired by Draper Fisher Jurvetson’s Timberline Venture Partners. She holds patents in distributed networking, databases, and search technologies, and decision making. Gitika is a pre-career tutor for undergraduates at Harvard and an advisor to many start-up companies and young entrepreneurs. She is also a Partner at KAHM Capital – an early stage venture capital firm, investing globally in high tech and health care and Founder/CEO at Navya Network – a startup for medical decision making.

Mondira (Mandy) Deb Pant

Academic Research Director at Intel, Dr. Mondira (Mandy) Deb Pant, works with leading academic researchers worldwide and technical experts at Intel to seed and drive research efforts in strategic areas of importance to the computing industry. Her core area of expertise includes VLSI devices and circuits, architecture, systems, on-chip power delivery, power management and power reduction. She has published 20+ technical papers in prestigious VLSI conferences and journals, has 2 issued patents and 5 pending patents.

Mandy received her Bachelors (B.Tech) in Computer Science and Engineering from I.I.T Kharagpur, India, a Masters (MS) in Electrical Engineering and a Doctorate (PhD) in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA.

Mandy is an active proponent of STE(A) M for Women and young girls and has participated in various efforts in promoting it across the nation. In 2009, Mandy was recognized by Mass High Tech (A Massachusetts High Tech Journal) as one of the top 10 upcoming Women to Watch in the New England area. In 2013, she was recognized by the India New England journal as one of the top 20 South Asian Women of 2013 in the New England area. She has recently risen to the role of Technical Chair for Intel’s biggest internal technical design conference.

She is a proud Mom to two young girls ages 14 and 11 and is an avid reader, traveler, dancer and yoga enthusiast.

Rita Advani (Moderator)

Rita Advani is currently the Director for Regional Programming for High Touch High Tech of New England (www.ScienceMadefunNE.net ), an organization bringing science enrichment programs to students in PreK – Grade 8 throughout Massachusetts and Rhode Island.  She is also the President of Bush Pond Ventures, LLC an organization focused on increasing science literacy for PreK-Grade 12. She has developed an extensive science curriculum for preschool age students and a course to teach preschool educators on how to teach science to preschool age children. The course is accredited by MassAEYC (the Massachusetts Association for the Education of Young Children).

Rita also has over 30 years of experience in marketing strategy, global product management and emerging markets development, in the supply chain, healthcare and loss prevention engineering services industries.

Her civic engagement included election to the Town of Norfolk School Committee, appointment as Chair of the Energy Committee for the Town of Norfolk and appointment to a commission on education finance for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.  As part of her interest in the field of home health care, she currently serves on the Board of the VNA Care Network & Hospice Foundation in the Atrius Health alliance.

A resident of Boston, she has an MBA from the Indian Institute of Management in Kolkata, India and is an avid photographer

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