I have read the sale policies, terms & conditions, and the privacy policy.
Terms and Conditions of Sale:
CERTAIN PRODUCT DISCLAIMERS.
WARNING: CHOKING HAZARD – SMALL PARTS. NOT FOR CHILDREN UNDER 5 YEARS. YOU ACKNOWLEDGE THAT THE PRODUCTS ARE NOT DESIGNED, MANUFACTURED OR INTENDED FOR USE BY CHILDREN UNDER THE AGE OF FIVE (5) AND MAY CONTAIN SMALL PARTS AND SCISSORS. IN ADDITION TO ALL OTHER LIMITATIONS AND DISCLAIMERS IN THIS AGREEMENT, COMPANY SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO YOU OR ANY THIRD PARTY, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, FOR ANY CLAIMS, LIABILITY, DAMAGES, LOSS OR COSTS ARISING FROM SUCH USE.
Adult Supervision
This product requires adult supervision. Purchase of this product requires ages 18 or older.
Product Disclaimers
The Product contains some chemicals which present a hazard to health. You must follow the following rules when use the product:
Products and Pricing - All products listed on the Site (“Products”), their descriptions, and their prices are each subject to change. Company reserves the right, at any time, to modify, suspend, or discontinue the sale of any Product with or without notice. You agree that Company will not be liable to you or to any third party for any modification, suspension, or discontinuance of any Product. In the event a Product is listed at an incorrect price or with incorrect information due to typographical error or error in pricing or Product information received from our suppliers, we shall have the right, prior to the acceptance of your order (as described below), to decline or cancel any such orders, whether or not the order has been confirmed and/or your credit card charged. If your credit card has already been charged for the order and we cancel your order, we shall immediately issue a credit to your credit card account in the amount of the charge.
Pricing and Payments
Bank Charges - You agree not to hold us responsible for any banking charges incurred due to payments on your account.
Order Procedure - No order is accepted from you until our website displays an order confirmation message and you receive a confirmation email from us. The Website allows to review your order and make any corrections before submitting it to us and by submitting the order you confirm that you have made any such corrections. We may require additional verifications or information before accepting any order.
Charging date - You will be charged upon submitting your order on the website.
Orders - When you make an order, you are making an offer to purchase, and such offer is subject to our acceptance. Your receipt of an order confirmation from us does not signify our acceptance of your order, nor does it constitute confirmation of our offer to sell. We reserve the right at any time after receipt of your order to accept or decline or cancel your order (in whole or in part) for any reason. We may require additional verifications or information before accepting any order. Your order is not accepted until we send you shipping information for the order (or the accepted portion thereof). Notwithstanding the foregoing, you agree that, if we cancel all or a part of your order, your sole and exclusive remedy is either that (a) we will issue a credit to your credit card account in the amount charged for the cancelled portion (if your credit card has already been charged for the order) or (b) we will not charge your credit card for the cancelled portion of the order.
Cancellation and Returns
Cancellation by You – Kit orders are non-returnable and non-refundable.
Exchange - We do not accept any product exchanges.
Damaged or Defective Items - You must inspect the products delivered to you on day of receipt and notify us the same day of any defects. We will replace or refund you for defective products if notified of any damage or defects on the day of receipt according the procedure below. All returns must be made within two weeks after the product shipment date. All returned products must be unused and returned in accordance with the instructions received from contacting our customer service. You are solely responsible for the cost of shipping the returned product. Provided that COSI confirms that your product was damaged and was returned as described above, your sole and exclusive remedy is to receive a replacement box.
Delivery and Shipping Policy
Shipping - Products will be shipped in accordance with the shipping method by USPS, UPS or FedEx. Any delivery dates provided by COSI are estimates. COSI reserves the right to make deliveries in installments. COSI will send you an email when your order has shipped and you may review your order and shipping information on your Account.
Territory - Products can only be delivered within the US including Alaska & Hawaii.
Delays - Any delivery dates provided by us are estimates. You will not hold us responsible for any delays, outside our control, which relate to the delivery of your kit(s).
Lost Subscriptions - It is your responsibility to report all lost subscriptions within two weeks of expected delivery time by email to [email protected]. Subscriptions not reported in this time will result in no refund.
Address Change - If you change your shipping or billing address, you must update your address by e-mailing guest services at [email protected] Please ensure we receive this communication within 24 hours of purchase as you will be liable for any kits posted to the wrong location.
Severability - If any part or parts of this Arbitration Agreement are found under the law to be invalid or unenforceable, then such specific part or parts shall be of no force and effect and shall be severed and the remainder of the Arbitration Agreement shall continue in full force and effect.
Governing Law - These Terms shall be governed by the laws of the State of California without giving effect to any conflict of laws principles that may require the application of the law of another jurisdiction.
Terms of Use:
COSI Web Use Policy -COSI is committed to protecting the online privacy of visitors to our website. This Policy applies only to the websites and online services provided by COSI. This Policy does not cover any interaction you may have with COSI by telephone, postal mail, or other offline communications. The purpose of this Policy is to inform you about the types of information we gather about you when you visit our websites, how we may use that information, and how we disclose it to third parties.
Use of Materials Posted on this Site - COSI's digital assets are protected by copyright and trademark laws, and are the property of COSI. Digital assets are defined as content from different media (e.g., photographs, video, text, audio, web pages, etc.) preserved in digital form.
Unless otherwise stated, you may print or download COSI digital assets for informational, educational, and other noncommercial purposes provided you include COSI Columbus as a reference as owner of the resource; for digital or live link environments, a link to www.cosi.org must be included.
The user may not reproduce, record, publish, modify, or distribute any COSI digital assets for commercial purposes without prior written consent from COSI. High resolution versions are available for most of the items included in the COSI Press Room. Requests for commercial use of digital assets or questions as to whether a specific use is permissible or requires written consent, and requests by the media for use of any image should be sent to our PR Manager.
Some examples of permitted use of COSI digital assets not requiring prior written permission: a handout including a COSI activity for an educational workshop a link from your web site to a specific COSI digital asset as part of a resource packet that you create for your students
Some examples of restricted use requiring prior written permission: a publication containing reproductions of COSI activities or images to be sold or provided in exchange for a fee use of COSI images to promote a commercial program, product, event, or activity, such as a science exhibition not produced by COSI.
Links - COSI welcomes links to our website with certain restrictions. Permission to create a link to the website is not required. We do however reserve the right to request removal of a link from any web page we believe does not further COSI's mission. You may NOT enclose pages from COSI's web site within a frame set on your site.
Our web site may provide links and pointers to internet web sites maintained by others. COSI is not responsible for the availability of any other website to which our website links, nor does COSI endorse or take responsibility for the content, advertising, products, or other materials made available through any other web site. Under no circumstances shall COSI be held responsible or liable, directly or indirectly, for any loss or damage that is caused or alleged to have been caused to you in connection with your use of, or reliance on, any content, goods, or services available on any other web site.
Trademarks - The trademarks COSI, Camp-In®, kidspace®, and Science2GO! TM are registered trademarks of COSI.
Security - Violations of system or network security are prohibited and may result in criminal and/or civil liability. COSI will investigate incidents involving such violations and may involve and cooperate with law enforcement if a criminal violation is suspected.
Disclaimers - THE SERVICES AND MATERIALS ON THIS SITE ARE PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED. NEITHER COSI NOR ANY OF ITS RESPECTIVE LICENSORS OR SUPPLIERS WARRANT THAT ANY FUNCTIONS CONTAINED IN OUR WEBSITE WILL BE UNINTERRUPTED OR ERROR FREE, THAT DEFECTS WILL BE CORRECTED, OR THAT OUR WEBSITE OR THE SERVER THAT MAKES THEM AVAILABLE ARE FREE OF VIRUSES OR OTHER HARMFUL COMPONENTS.
NEITHER COSI NOR ANY OF ITS RESPECTIVE LICENSORS OR SUPPLIERS WARRANT OR MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS REGARDING THE USE OR THE RESULTS OF THE USE OF THE MATERIALS IN OUR WEBSITE IN TERMS OF ITS CORRECTNESS, ACCURACY, RELIABILITY, OR OTHERWISE. YOU (AND NOT COSI OR ANY OF ITS AFFILIATED COMPANIES OR ANY OF ITS RESPECTIVE LICENSORS OR SUPPLIERS) ASSUME THE ENTIRE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR, OR CORRECTION.
Limitation of Liability- UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO NEGLIGENCE, WILL COSI OR ANY OF ITS RESPECTIVE LICENSORS OR SUPPLIERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES THAT RESULT FROM THE USE OF OR THE INABILITY TO USE THE MATERIALS ON THE SITE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
Jurisdiction - COSI controls and operates its website from our offices in the United States of America. We do not represent that materials on the website are appropriate or available for use in other locations. Persons who choose to access our website from other locations do so on their own initiative and are responsible for compliance with local laws, if and to the extent local laws are applicable.
Choice of Law - If any disputes arise regarding your use of our website, such disputes shall be resolved according to the laws of the State of Ohio, and the federal or state courts of the City and County shall have exclusive jurisdiction over all claims. If any of these terms and conditions are found unlawful, void, or for any reason unenforceable, then that provision will be considered severable from the remaining terms and conditions and will not affect the validity and enforceability of the remaining provisions.
By using this website, you are deemed to have agreed to these terms and conditions of use. COSI reserves the right to modify these terms at any time. You should check these terms and conditions periodically for changes. By using this website after we post any changes to these terms and conditions, you agree to accept those changes, whether or not you have reviewed them. If at any time you choose not to accept these terms and conditions of use, please do not use this website.
All content on this website is subject to change without notice. COSI reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to terminate your access to all or part of this website with or without notice. COSI may change, suspend, or discontinue all or any aspect of the website at any time, including the availability of any feature, database, or content (including interactive areas or online exhibits) without prior notice or liability.
Contact Information
Mail:
COSI
333 West Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215
Phone:
614.228.COSI
Fax:
614.629.3226
E-mail:
[email protected]
Snake Bites - Grades 4-6 |
Junior Star Safari - Grades PreK - 1 |
Animal Adventures - Grades 2-4 |
Dino Tales - Grades PreK - 1 |
Superhero Science - Grades 5-8 |
Introduction to Coding - Grades 5-8 |
Gadget Works - Grades 2-5 |
Forensic Psychology - Grades 9-12+ |
Genetic Counseling - Grades 9-12+ |
In Depth: Autopsy - Grades 10-12+ |
In Depth: Kidney Transplant - Grades 9-12+ |
Surgical Suite: Sports Medicine - Grades 6-12+ |
Surgical Suite: Total Knee Replacement - Grades 6-12+ |
You Become the Pharmacist - Grades 10-12+ |
: On-Demand Workshops |
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Introduction to Coding |
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Gadget Works |
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Forensic Psychology |
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Genetic Counseling |
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In Depth: Autopsy |
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In Depth: Kidney Transplant |
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Surgical Suite: Sports Medicine |
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Surgical Suite: Total Knee Replacement |
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You Become the Pharmacist |
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*Orders of 25 kits or less, received on or before December 11th will be delivered by December 24th. Orders over 25 kits will take approx 3-4 weeks for delivery.
For larger orders needed by December 24th or special circumstances, please contact us at [email protected]
Got It!
If you are ordering for a school or nonprofit organization, you may be eligible for a discounted bulk rate. A tax-exempt number is required at the time of checkout for this discount.
When ordering with a tax-exempt status, shipping will be charged.
Your kit has been added to your shopping cart!
**Traffic Alert!**
Due to some minor construction and races in the area, please be aware of the
following:
The Color of Science is a comprehensive science interest and literacy initiative that invites the public to engage with the stories of remarkable individuals who have impacted our society through their scientific work and achievements. As part of The Color of Science initiative, COSI delivers signature inclusivity, diversity, equity, and accessibility programming, inspiring learners of all ages to subscribe to the notion that “science is for everyone.” The Color of Science invites the public to engage with remarkable science, technology, engineering, art and math (STEAM) professionals, including women, persons of African American, Latinx/Hispanic, Asian Pacific, and Native American heritages, members of the LGBTQ+ community, and persons with disabilities.
SUPPORT SCIENCE FOR EVERYONE
The Color of Science advances COSI’s mission to engage, inspire, and transform lives by:
The Color of Science will help motivate young people, as well as career-reentering adults, to see themselves as the very people who will fill these in-demand STEAM jobs, while ensuring STEAM professions increasingly reflect and leverage the entire population – with all its diversity and the many potential scientific contributions this incredible diversity will enable.
Join us for a free special evening event at COSI featuring a panel discussion and
reception, hosted by COSI President & CEO Dr. Frederic Bertley. The panel will
showcase a dynamic group of diverse scientists, sharing their personal stories
and accomplishments around becoming a STEAM professional and discussing how
being a minority has impacted their experiences. The event includes a Q&A
period following the panel discussion, and a reception with complimentary food
and drink immediately following connects guests with the scientists, allowing
participants to engage in further dialogue with these remarkable professionals.
Registration for this event is now closed.
PANELISTS
Mr. Justin Kershaw
Food Scientist
Founder / CEO of Sow Strong Food
Justin Kershaw and his wife Chaquerra are the founders of SOW Strong Food. Their
“Mom on a Mission Bar” is a gluten and soy-free carb bar that is made with few
ingredients and designed to provide high quality nutrition.
Dr. Melita Moore
Scientist
Founder and CEO Levels Unlocked Enterprises/ Chief Medical Officer
Dr. Melita N. Moore is a quadruple board certified physician in Physical Medicine
and Rehabilitation, Sports Medicine, Brain Injury Medicine, and Lifestyle Medicine.
She was the first black female team physician in the NBA and has been a team doctor
for the WNBA, NBA2K and consulted for the NFL.
Capt. David Murray
Assistant Chief of Naval Research
Captain David Murray is the Assistant Chief of Naval Research for the United States
Navy. The Office of Naval Research supports the Navy and the U.S Marine Corps by
creating and implementing cutting edge technology and procedures for the advancement
of national security.
Ms. Takeia Marie: @takeiamarie
Dr. Stanford Carpenter: @SWCarpenter
Victor Dandridge Jr.: @vantageinhouse and @ucre8comics
Past Art Submissions
Name: SriNidhi K. - Age: 12 - Artwork Title: Mother Mars
Name: Maria F. - Age: 12 - Artwork Title: We are all scientists
Name: Darell H. - Age: 8 - Artwork Title: Scientist Christian Curing COVID
Name: Gavin H. - Age: 7 - Artwork Title: Scientist Gerry Experimenting
Name: Grace H. - Age: 39 - Artwork Title: I Love Marine Biology
Name: Shivam
Name: Luci - Age: 7
Name: Reece S. - Age: 6 - Artwork Title: On the Moon
Name: Sophia - Age: 10 - Artwork Title: My Scientist
Name: Anna W. - Age: 11
Name: Cameron L - Age: 12
Name: Clara F
Name: Marco K. - Age: 13 - Artwork Title: Maria the Scientist
Name: Ming F. - Age: 12 - Artwork Title: A Pond in a Phone
Name: Shivam K. - Age: 5 - Artwork Title: Our Solar System
Digital Series Interview Archive
COSI and OHC Proudly Present: Celebrating Black Comic Creators!
Date: 2.24.2022
Speaker: Laurie Miller, COSI's Animal Care Expert
Date: 11.04.2021
Speaker: Dr. Orlay Alonso, Cuban Concert Pianist
Date: 10.07.2021
Speaker: Matthew Portis, Inventor and Engineer
Date: 09.02.2021
Speaker: Dr. Swati Mohan, NASA Engineer
Date: 08.05.2021
Speaker: Sunita Williams, NASA Astronaut
Date: 07.01.2021
Open Q&A with Immunologist Dr. Frederic Bertley, COSI’s President and CEO!
Date: 05.06.2021
Speaker: Camille Schrier
Date: 04.01.2021
Speaker: Kellie Gerardi
Date: 03.04.2021
Speaker: Nicole Jackson
Date: 02.04.2021
Speaker: Caleb Anderson
Date: 01.8.2021
Speaker: Dr. Kathy Sullivan
Date: 12.3.2020
COVID Conversations
Speakers: 10tv's Angela An and Tracy Townsend and COSI President and CEO and immunologist Dr. Frederic Bertley
Date: 04.05.2021
Speakers: Dr. Mysheika Roberts, Dr. Karen Wurapa, Ms. Tracy Maxwell Heard, & Ms. Demetries Neely
Date: 02.26.2021
At COSI, we are always looking for ways to highlight the amazing contributions to science, technology, engineering and math made by underrepresented groups such as women, persons within the Latinix, African American, and Asian-Pacific heritages, as well as those within the LGBTQ+ community. Join us in celebrating the diversity in STEAM by learning more about these individuals below.
Dr. Temple Grandin is a Professor of Animal Science. Her research on animal behavior has helped advance the humane treatment of livestock. Dr. Grandin uses the unique way her brain works to imagine the animals’ perspective. Temple Grandin has become an advocate for Autism and the power of different brains.
Dana Bolles is an External Information Technology Lead for NASA. She has worked a lot of different jobs at NASA since 1995. Dana was born with limb differences...and is an advocate for people with disabilities in the STEM field, as well as an ambassador for the IF/THEN Initiative.
Dr. Geerat Vermeji is a paleoecologist, someone who studies how organisms interact with their environment. He is also an evolutionary biologist, which means he studies how different forms of life on the planet have changed over long periods of time. His research is primarily focuses on seashells and mollusks! As a Blind Scientist, Dr. Vermeji learns about seashell shapes and details through touch.
Ralph Braun is a trail blazing inventor and entrepreneur. Ralph lived with Spinal Muscular Atrophy, and was a wheelchair user. He invented the motorized scooter, as well as the wheelchair lift used in accessible vehicles. By creating tools to help improve his life, he changed the lives of others with disabilities. Ralph’s company, BraunAbility, remains a worldwide entity and an industry leader in mobility aids.
Dr. Caroline Solomon is a professor of Biology and the Dean of Faculty at Gallaudet University, which is an institution of higher education for Deaf students. Dr. Solomon, who became deaf as an infant after an illness, is a major proponent of helping students who are deaf or hard of hearing to have access to STEM learning.
Aaron is the Founder and CEO of Form5 Prosthetics, a non-profit organization that creates prosthetics for people with limb differences. Aaron was born with a limb difference and wears a prosthetic arm that he created for himself using a 3-D printer! Form5 Prosthetics engages with students who are interested in STEM by hosting specialized workshops that utilize 3-D technology. Aaron’s commitment to providing STEM education and experiences by giving back to the community is one of the many reasons he was recognized as a COSI STEM Star in 2019!
Mary Ann Horton is an internet pioneer. Born as Mark, she completed her Ph.D. in Computer Science at Berkeley in 1981, where she was an active part of the early UNIX development days that led to the development of Sun Microsystems, Cisco routers, Linux, and the Internet. She has been a keen supporter for transgender rights and as a result she won the Trailblazer Outie award, for her work to get companies she worked for to add transgender language to the EO policy and activism for transgender health benefits. Doctor Horton also served on the board of Stonewall Columbus.
Ann Mei Chang is a technology expert, global development advocate, author, and public speaker. She was most recently the Chief Innovation Officer for the Pete for America organization, the 2020 presidential campaign for Pete Buttigieg, the first openly gay presidential candidate. Ann Mei is a leading advocate for social innovation and draws on her rare experience as an executive across the tech industry, nonprofits, and the U.S. government to offer a unique perspective on tackling the most pressing social challenges of our times. She was included in the "20 Top LGBTQ+ Entrepreneurs, Executives and Thought Leaders" by Global Shakers in 2019.
Jack Thomas Andraka is an American university student, inventor, and cancer researcher. While still a high school student he came to national attention after winning the grand prize at the 2012 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair where he presented a method for possibly detecting the early stages of pancreatic and other cancers. As of 2018 he was enrolled at Stanford University as a junior majoring in anthropology and in electrical engineering.
American anthropologist and psychologist, author of Coming of Age in Samoa, and Curator of Ethnology at the American Museum of Natural History. While President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1975 she presided over the passage of a AAAS policy statement deploring discrimination against gay and lesbian scientists. Mead helped pioneer, through cross-cultural studies, greater understanding for the natural variety of sexual behaviors that occur in human societies.
Bruce Voeller is an American biologist and AIDS researcher who pioneered the use of nonoxynol-9 as a spermicide and topical virus-transmission preventative. He established the Mariposa foundation to conduct human sexuality research, placing special emphasis on reducing the risks of sexually transmitted diseases. At the time of his death, Voeller’s research centered on the reliability of various brands of condoms in preventing the spread of diseases, and on viral leakage studies for the then-recently approved “female condom”.
Sally Kristen Ride was an American astronaut, physicist, and engineer. Born in Los Angeles, she joined NASA in 1978 and became the first American woman and LGBTQ person in space in 1983. Ride was the third woman in space overall. Ride remains the youngest American astronaut to have traveled to space, having done so at the age of 32. After flying twice on the Orbiter Challenger, she left NASA in 1987.
Emma Haruka Iwao is a Japanese computer scientist and cloud developer advocate at Google. In 2019 Haruka Iwao calculated the world's most accurate value of pi - which included 31.4 trillion digits, far past the previous record of 22 trillion.
Alan L. Hart was an American physician, radiologist, tuberculosis researcher, writer and novelist. He was in 1917–18 one of the first trans men to undergo hysterectomy and gonadectomy in the United States, and lived the rest of his life as a man. He pioneered the use of x-ray photography in tuberculosis detection, and helped implement TB screening programs that saved thousands of lives.
Lynn Conway is an electrical engineer and computer science expert, renowned for her pioneering work in microelectronic chip design. She's been called the "hidden hand" in the 1980s microchip design revolution that made today's personal computers and smartphones possible. After a lifetime struggling as living as a man, Conway made the decision to undergo gender reassignment surgery to become a woman, resulting in IBM firing her for her 'choices'. In 2009, the LGBT rights charity Stonewall named her as one of the Stonewall 40 Trans Heroes.
This award-winning geologist is famed for his application of geological science to environmental issues, making geoscience more accessible and understandable, and was one of the first scientists to highlight the role of plate tectonics in earthquakes to the public. It was when he was accepting a Distinguished Career Award from the Geological Society of America that he came out as being gay, after which he worked hard to convince his fellow scientists to accept and encourage gay students.
Laurence Michael Dillon was a British physician, famed for his work on ethics and medicine. He is the first person known to have transitioned from female to male both hormonally and surgically. In 1946 Dillon published Self: A Study in Ethics and Endocrinology, a book about what would now be called transgender, though that term had not been coined yet.
Sara Josephine Baker was an American physician notable for making contributions to public health, especially in the immigrant communities of New York City. Her fight against the damage that widespread urban poverty and ignorance caused to children, especially newborns, is perhaps her most lasting legacy. Dr. Baker was an accomplished early 20th century scientist who lived with female partners all her life.
May-Britt Moser is a Norwegian psychologist and neuroscientist. Dr. Moser pioneered research on the brain's mechanism for representing space. She won the Nobel Prize in 2014 for her discovery of grid cells in the entorhinal cortex and several other space representing neurons that make up the positioning system of the brain. Moser's work gave the ability for scientists to gain new knowledge into the cognitive processes and spatial deficits associated with human neurological conditions such as Alzheimer's disease.
Gomez is currently one of the leading ladies in tech. She was one of the first Latinas working at Google and Youtube, and then she became a founding member of Twitter’s International team, where she led Twitter en Español. Being underrepresented in the tech world and experiencing discrimination, Gomez decided to do something about it, founding (and acting as CEO of) Atipica in 2015. It’s a recruiting software start-up that uses artificial and human intelligence to help companies make bias-free decisions when hiring employees.
Hedy Lamarr was an Austrian-born American film actress and inventor who was posthumously inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame. Lamarr patented a technology enabling radio signals to jump frequencies, which makes mobile phone, wifi, and military communications possible. She was one of the most popular actresses of her day and starred in 30 Hollywood films during the 1930s and 1940s.
Sau Lan Wu is a Chinese American particle physicist. Wu was a key contributor to the discovery of gluon – an elementary particle that acts as the exchange particle for the strong force between quarks - a fundamental constituent of matter. For her effort, Wu and her collaborators were awarded the 1995 European Physical Society High Energy and Particle Physics Prize.
Sara Seager is an astrophysicist and planetary scientist at MIT. Professor Sara Seager's main research goal is to find and identify another Earth. Her research has introduced many new ideas to the field of exoplanet characterization, including work that led to the first detection of an exoplanet atmosphere. She was part of a team that co-discovered the first detection of light emitted from an exoplanet and the first spectrum of an exoplanet.
Jennifer Anne Doudna is an American biochemist. Doudna has been a leading figure in what is referred to as the "CRISPR revolution" for her fundamental work and leadership in developing CRISPR-mediated genome editing. In 2012, she and a colleague were the first to propose that enzymes from bacteria that control microbial immunity could be used for programmable editing of genomes. This discovery is now considered one of the most significant discoveries in the history of biology.
The world’s “next Albert Einstein” is how Harvard University describes Sabrina Gonzalez Pasterski. Sabrina is a Cuban doctoral student at Harvard studying high energy physics, black holes and spacetime. Her work has been cited by Stephen Hawking. By the time Sabrina was 13, she had learned how to fly a plane, built her own aircraft, and flown it solo.
Dr. Jane Wright was the first woman to be elected president of the New York Cancer Society. Dr. Wright's father was one of the first African American graduates of Harvard Medical School, and he set a high standard for his daughters. Dr. Jane Wright analyzed a wide range of anti-cancer agents, explored the relationship between patient and tissue culture response, and developed new techniques for administering cancer chemotherapy. By 1967, she was the highest ranking African American woman in a United States medical institution.
Mae Jemison is an American engineer, physician, and former NASA astronaut. She became the first black woman to travel into space when she served as a mission specialist aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour. She holds several honorary doctorates and has been inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame and the International Space Hall of Fame.
Kusala Rajendran is an Indian seismologist and currently a professor at the Centre for Earth Sciences, Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, India. She has worked extensively on earth quake patterns in India and is considered to be one of the pioneers in this field. Rajendran received the inaugural National Award for Women Scientists from the Indian Ministry of Earth Sciences for her work on understanding earthquakes in India.
Wilcots is the senior geologist and manager of environmental projects for a company called Sci-tek in Philadelphia. His team includes civil and geotechnical engineers, environmental scientists, data analysts and software programmers. They examine landscapes; assess environments; and design, plan and document environmental matters. Wilcots spent four days at a dinosaur excavation site in northeastern Montana with paleontologist Gregory Wilson of the Burke Museum working on what is known as the Tufts-Love Tyrannosaurus rex, which according to the museum is the 15th T. rex specimen that includes a skull.
Dr. Rotimi is the Director of the Trans-National Institutes of Health center for research in genomics and global health. He works to ensure that population genetics include genomes from African populations and founded the African Society of Human Genetics in 2003. Through his research, he found that hypertension and diabetes rates are significantly higher in African-American populations in Chicago than they are in rural Africa. He attributed this to lifestyle factors, including weight, salt consumption and levels of physical activity.
Dr. Berger-Sweeny is a neuroscientist, She is the first African-American and the first woman to serve in the position as President of Trinity College. While working on her Ph.D. in neurotoxicology from the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, Berger-Sweeney did the proof of concept work on Razadyne, which went on to be the second-most-used Alzheimer’s drug in the world. She completed her postdoctoral training at the National Institute of Health in Paris, France.
In addition to being a practicing Pulmonary & Critical Care Physician, Dr. Dale, as his patients call him, is an award-winning physician, speaker, and best-selling author. He is best known as the founder of Diverse Medicine Inc. – an initiative to increase ethnic and socioeconomic diversity in the medical workforce via the implementation of community programs that expose underrepresented students to the field of medicine.
Dr. Robert Bullard is often referred to as the “father of the environmental justice movement.” He has been one of the leading voices on the issue for decades. In 2008, he was named one of Newsweek’s 13 “Environmental Leaders of the Century”. Dr Bullard has authored numerous books on the prominence of waste facilities in predominately African-American areas all over the nation, as well as others that address urban land use, industrial facility siting, housing, transportation, climate justice, emergency response, smart growth, and equity.
Dr. Glave is a historian and professor whose specialty is African American Environmentalism. Her love of nature has translated professionally and vocationally and she writes and speaks extensively on the topic. She is currently serving as the associate pastor at Ingomar Church in Pittsburgh, where part of her ministry is advocacy for impoverished and marginalized people affected by environmental disparity including access to recreational spaces and healthcare. She is the author of “Rooted in the Earth: Reclaiming the African American Environmental Heritage.”
As a researcher, Dr. Hamilton studies insects that live in the water, chemicals in the water, and measure water quality. He performs research in ponds, streams, lakes, rivers, and wetlands. As a professor, he also educates students about living organisms and where and how they live. Dr. Hamilton’s research is important because by studying these waters, we can better monitor pollution and its effects on the environment. We see the results of human activities and can make changes that benefit the environment.
Dr. Johnson is one of the first female African American chemical oceanographers and the first African American to earn a doctoral degree in oceanography from Texas A&M University. Johnson has also made several notable contributions to STEAM education, which earned her the 2010 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering.
Inspired by the Columbia Space Shuttle disaster, Jasmine decided to pursue Aerospace Engineering at the University of Michigan. Through her desire to mix her love of dance with her love of math and science, Jasmine created her own company, The Steam Collaborative, which educates children and their parents about STEAM from an artistic perspective. Find out more about her initiative here.
Krishna Foster is a Chemist and Chemistry professor California State University LA. After graduating high school, she received a NASA Fellowship through the Women in Science and Engineering Program. Her work has focused on the effects of sunlight on pollutants at the air-water interface. Dr. Foster sought grants for Minorities Opportunities in Research (MORE), which raises funding specifically to encourage students of color to achieve a doctorate in STEAM fields. Dr. Foster is a ScienceMaker and more information about her work and experiences are captured here.
Dr. Petters is a Belizean-American mathematical physicist, who is the Benjamin Powell Professor of Mathematics and a Professor Physics and Economics at Duke University. Petters is a founder of mathematical astronomy, focusing on problems connected to the interplay of gravity and light and employing tools from astrophysics, cosmology, general relativity, and high energy physics.
Dr. Edward Tunstel is a Senior Robotics Engineer at NASA JPL. He earned the Ph.D. in electrical engineering at University of New Mexico. His expertise is in robot navigation, fuzzy logic and autonomous behavior-based control. He currently works on the NASA Mars Exploration Rovers mission as rover autonomous navigation systems engineer and as mobility and robotic arm subsystem lead engineer for mission operations.
Dr. Aguilar is an Associate Professor in Environmental Studies at Denison University. She teaches a broad spectrum of Environmental Science courses, including core courses and some that examine issues at the intersection of environment, education, race/ethnicity, and community. Specifically, her work examines how sociocultural learning theories help to account for learning of marginalized groups in environmental and science contexts through community approaches. Her recent endeavors also involve a critical analysis of inclusive practices in the environmental arena.
Dr. Costa is an Associate Professor at The Ohio State University. His research is primarily focused in the measurement and identification of natural and anthropogenic process that control the cycling of nutrients in aquatic and terrestrial systems. He has researched excess nutrients in nearshore/ offshore coral reefs of Brazil, as well as water contamination. He is a member of the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, and has been on the OSU faculty since 2006.
Carlos is a software Engineer at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. He graduated from the University of Puerto Rico with a B.S. in Electrical Engineering, and went straight to NASA. Carlos currently manages the overall design and integration of the ground system for the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) project. The MAVEN spacecraft will orbit Mars for a year and will explore its upper atmosphere, ionosphere, and interactions with the Sun and solar wind. This is the first Goddard-led Mars mission, and after the launch he will be the Missions Operations Manager.
In June 1991, Sidney M. Gutierrez became the first U.S.-born Hispanic astronaut to travel into outer space. Gutierrez's second flight into space took place in April 1994, when he served as commander of the STS-59 Space Shuttle mission. This assignment made him the first person of Hispanic descent to command a spacecraft.
Scarlin is a spacecraft engineer for the James Webb Space Telescope. She tests and verifies ground software systems that are used to control telescopes while in space, one of which controlled the telescope when it is launched into space in October 2018. The telescopes will be used to discover new planets and the first stars after the dark ages. She completed an internship at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, and by the age of 20, she was part of the ground control system team for the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite.
Dr. Lanno is a Researcher and Associate Professor at The Ohio State University. He and his team research the bio-availability of chemicals in the environment. Their primary focus is on soil-chemical interactions and the relationship between kinetics and residues of chemicals, such as biomarkers in both aquatic and terrestrial environments. He has used fish and isopods as models when examining bio-availability.
Dr. Ellen Ochoa, a veteran astronaut, was the 11th director of the Johnson Space Center. She was JSC's first Hispanic director, and its second female director. Her previous management roles include Deputy Center Director and Director of Flight Crew Operations. In 1993 Ochoa became the first Hispanic woman in the world to go to space when she served on a nine-day mission aboard the shuttle Discovery.
Geisha Williams is a Cuban American businesswoman. At the age of five, she migrated to the US with her parents. She earned a bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering from the University of Miami and an MBA from Nova Southeastern University. She went on to become the first Latina to be president and CEO of a Fortune 500 company when she was selected to lead Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a nearly $30 billion firm with 20,000 employees that provides electricity and natural gas to about 16 million people in California. Williams joined PG&E in 2007 to oversee the company’s electric operations before she was named President and CEO 10 years later.
Kalpana Chawla's love of flying led to her career as a NASA astronaut. She started her higher education in India, earning a B.S. in aeronautical engineering from Punjab Engineering College in 1982. Moving to the U.S., she turned to aerospace engineering and received her M.S. from the University of Texas and her Ph.D. from the University of Colorado. Chawla joined NASA in 1995 and was assigned as mission specialist on the space shuttle STS-87 in 1997, becoming the first Indian-American woman to go into space. She was a crew member on the Shuttle Columbia when it broke up upon reentry to the Earth's atmosphere in February 2003.
If you're serious about your stereo equipment, you probably own or have owned Bose speakers! Amar Bose was born and raised in Philadelphia, the son of a political dissident who moved from Calcutta. As a teenager, Bose earned money by repairing model trains and then transistors, practical experience which helped when he went on to MIT to study electrical engineering. His speaker system was one of the first to make use of sound reflecting off walls and the ceiling. In 1964 he founded the Bose Corporation, which has developed car stereo systems, the Wave radio, as well as noise canceling headsets used by pilots and space-shuttle astronauts.
Chandrasekhar earned a B.S. in physics at Presidency College, Madras, then went on to earn advanced degrees at Cambridge University, and a Prize Fellowship at Trinity College. In 1937 he joined the faculty of the University of Chicago. There he delved into such astrophysical subjects as stellar structure, the theory of white dwarf stars, and the mathematical theory of black holes. Chandrasekhar shared the 1983 Nobel Prize in Physics “for his theoretical studies of the physical processes of importance to the structure and evolution of the stars.” NASA renamed the Advanced X-ray Astrophysics Facility for him: the Chandra X-Ray Observatory, which helps astronomers better understand the structure and evolution of the universe.
Steven Chu shared the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics for the development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light. In 1978 he went to work at Bell Laboratories, where he did his award-winning work. He went on to teach at Stanford and continued his work and also did research on polymer physics and biology. In 2004 he was named director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. President-elect Barack Obama nominated Chu as his secretary of energy.
In 1885, Lue moved to Deland, Florida, where Fannie and her sister had bought land, and began to work in the orange groves. There he developed the extraordinary horticultural contributions that would earn him the title “citrus wizard.” The most famous of his creations was the “Lue Gim Gong orange.” These oranges would mature in August or September, ensuring that the fruit would not freeze and be ruined. It was an enormous advance for the citrus industry. He also developed a grapefruit that grew individually on the tree rather than in clusters, a strongly scented grapefruit, and a rosebush that produced seven varieties of roses.
David Ho earned his B.S. in physics from Caltech, but was soon attracted to molecular biology and the cutting-edge technology of gene splicing. He went on to the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Science and Technology. The AIDS epidemic beckoned as a challenge and he began studying the virus at Massachusetts General Hospital and UCLA School of Medicine. Realizing that AIDS was an infectious disease and that HIV multiplies many times right from the start, Ho and his team administered a combination of protease-inhibitor and antiviral drug “cocktails” to early-stage AIDS patients with dramatic results. For his inroads into the vicious disease, Ho was named Time's 1996 Man of the Year. Ho continues his work at the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center.
The “father of fiber optics,” Narinder Kapany grew up in northern India, where a teacher informed him that light only traveled in a straight line. He took this as a challenge and made the study of light his life work. He studied physics at Agra University and went on to advanced studies in optics at the Imperial College of Science in London. In 1954 Nature published his report of successfully transmitting images through fiber optical bundles. He also founded Kaptron Inc. and K2 Optronics. He has taught at UC Berkeley, UC Santa Cruz, and Stanford University. Kapany was the founding chairman and major funder of the Sikh Foundation, which runs programs in publishing, academia, and the arts.
Chanchao received her Ph.D. from Suranaree University of Technology, where she studied mammalian embryo development and stem cell biology. Her focus is to identify factors affecting lineage differentiation in preimplantation embryo. Her work has demonstrated that not only the positional-information, but also proper expression levels of Hippo component genes play significant role in lineage segregation and differentiation in preimplantation embryos. She now works as a researcher investigating the role of Hippo signaling pathway in mammalian embryo and stem cells.
Varisa is an Assistant Professor at Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand, investigating the role of CAMSAP proteins on cancer cell biology. Varisa is the first author of a paper published in Journal of Cell Science which investigates the role of CAMSAP3 on lung cancer cell migration.
Dr. Hasibun Naher received her PhD from the School of Mathematical Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM). She is now working as an Associate Professor in mathematics at the Department of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, BRAC University (BU), in Bangladesh. She has published twenty five scientific papers in international journals. She is also serving as an International Scientific Committee with several International Conferences on Mathematics.
Dr. Tamal Lata Aditya has significantly contributed to the development and dissemination of over 12 improved rice varieties and 12 promising advanced breeding lines that primarily respond to drought and yield challenges. She has authored and co-authored multiple peer-reviewed scientific papers and presented works at many national and International conferences.
Surapa Thiemjarus is a researcher from the National Electronics and Computer Technology Center (NECTEC), National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSTDA), Thailand. She received her PhD degree in Computing from Imperial College, UK in 2007. Her research interests include context-aware and pervasive sensing, body sensor networks and applications, sensor fusion, machine learning, pattern recognition, sound and signal processing, and assistive technologies. She is currently a managing editor and an associate editor of the IEEE Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics.
In these passports, you will explore the great diversity that exists within a variety of scientific landscapes. We hope you enjoy reading these stories about some of the most remarkable men and women who are researchers, scientists and engineers!
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A core diversity and equity initiative for COSI since 2018, The Color of Science program showcases the superb contributions of women, persons of color, and members of the LGBTQ community to modern science. Highlighting these remarkable men and women demonstrates to the next generation the myriad of incredible opportunities for all populations in a variety of careers in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEAM).
This annual program has two key components:
STEAM jobs are growing faster than any other US job sector, and studies show that 76% of students ages 11-17 don’t know what an engineer does for work. We need our youth to be interested in STEAM careers now more than ever, and your donation will help us to engage the community with this important initiative. You can help us showcase the true diversity within the scientific professions and inspire the next generation of diverse STEAM professionals!