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Students create photo project to promote women in engineering

10/12/2018

Airplanes, detergents, wheelchairs, automobiles, circuit boards, phone apps and bridges. A degree in engineering can apply to a diverse range of industries, but the face of engineering itself is not diverse. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the percentage of women in engineering and architecture-related fields was only 16.2 percent in 2017.

In honor of the 25th year of the Women in Engineering Program, Abigail Palombo, a graphic design major; Jillian Hilenski, mechanical engineering major; and Amanda Jancewicz, chemical engineering major, wanted to share stories of women engineers who have walked the halls of ÐãÉ«¶ÌÊÓƵ and made a career out of engineering in a male-dominated industry. Their photo project, “We are the 16%,” is meant to inspire the next generation of women in engineering and challenge the idea of who an engineer is.

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Abigail Palombo, left, Jillian Hilenski and Amanda Jancewicz collaborated on the photo project.

The trio of students interviewed and photographed 16 women, like Alyssa Gill ’16, a developer relations engineer for Squirrels LLC, a company that develops streaming and sharing apps, such as Reflector 2 and AirParrot, and Jane Smith ’80, who is a senior project engineer at Rockwell Automation.

“For me personally, this project has been an opportunity to advocate for females in the engineering workforce, while also encouraging younger girls to consider a position in a STEM field,” says Jancewicz. “When I was growing up, I loved to play with Legos, do puzzles and play on the computer. I think a lot of young women just don't realize what the field actually entails, which is a shame considering that the industry is challenging, rewarding, ever-changing, and makes an impact on society and the environment.”

“We are the 16%” will join an already existing exhibit of photographs of alumnae engineers promoting gender diversity in the industry along a wall in the College of Engineering lobby inside the Auburn Science and Engineering Center after Oct. 18.


Media contact: Alex Knisely, 330-972-6477 or aknisely@uakron.edu.