Moiya McTier (Harvard '16)
Recipient of the 2016 Chambliss Award
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Biography
Meet Moiya McTier, recipient of the 2016 Chambliss Student Achievement Award. This award is granted every year by the American Astronomical Society (AAS) to recognize exemplary research by undergraduate and graduate students. Moiya is currently a senior at Harvard University. She won this award for her work on determining exoplanet habitability using orbital eccentricity. She conducted this research last summer, when she was a member of the Harvard Banneker Institute. This
work ties directly to her senior thesis, a science fiction novel set on the
planet she studied, which she eventually hopes to get published. After
graduation, Moiya plans to get her PhD in astrophysics and, if she still has
any energy left, a master’s degree in medieval European folklore.
This interview is the first of a series of posts on the Astronomy In Color blog dedicated to recognizing achievements by outstanding astronomers of color. Feel free to contact Jorge Moreno (jorgemoreno AT cpp.edu) if you know any other person of color in astronomy who has recently won an award or made any other accomplishment.
Moiya: I had almost forgotten that I
had entered the contest by the time the winners were announced. So when I got
the email, I had to read it a few times before the news really settled in. And
then I called my mom and we celebrated together on the phone.
Moreno: Please tell me more about
yourself. What’s your story?
Moiya: This is going to sound fake,
but I promise it’s true. I actually grew up with in a log cabin in the middle
of the woods in Pennsylvania without running water. We didn’t have TV and I was
an only child, so I spent a lot of time cracking small codes and cyphers that
my mom would create. I wanted to be a cryptographer pretty much all the way up
to my sophomore year of college, when I took my first astronomy class.
Moreno: What inspired you to pursue a
career in astronomy?
Moiya: My finding astronomy was a
total fluke. I needed a fourth class one semester and one of my friends asked
if I wanted to try out a class on extra-galactic astronomy with her. She ended
up not taking the class, but I kind of fell in love with the topic. From there,
I took the typical route: internships, term-time research, grad school
applications. And there were definitely times when I thought it would be less
painful to give up and go back to my hometown to become a coal miner, but I had
friends and advisors at each step to remind me how much I loved astronomy and
how good I was at it.
Moreno: In your opinion, what qualities
makes you so unique and compelling?
Moiya: I absolutely refuse to confine
myself to a single defining box. As a result of that, I’m actually studying
both astronomy and mythology in school. That means I have years of experience
in tackling problems using an interdisciplinary approach. In order to be
successful, you have to be able to adapt to new situations and think of new
solutions to old problems. My work is unique because I approach it in a way
that most people aren’t willing to.
Moreno: As a woman of color, what
challenges and obstacles have you faced in your career? How have you overcome
these challenges?
Moiya: Growing up, I was one of maybe
five black people in a part of Pennsylvania where it’s not uncommon to hear racial
slurs being thrown around, so I’m no stranger to overt racism. But in my time
at Harvard, I’ve learned that systemic – or subtle – racism, and not its overt
counterpart, is what really stands in my way. People sometimes ask why it took
me so long to believe that I could become a scientist. Well, I don’t know how I
could have been expected to realize it sooner when I had never seen anyone who
looks like me doing anything like what I’m doing now.
I’ve overcome that obstacle by
repeatedly telling myself that if I succeed, maybe I can be the reason a young
woman of color decides to pursue a STEM career in 20 years.
Moreno: People of color, especially
women of color, are severely under-represented in our field. What ideas do you
have for making astronomy a more equitable and inclusive community? For
dismantling racism and sexism in general?
Moiya: I do genuinely believe that we
can fix this problem that exists in our community, but I think it will take two
things: education and time. I think it needs to become standard in astronomy
departments everywhere to hold mandatory seminars and workshops about the different
kinds of inequalities that exist in our communities. We can’t expect people to
help us fix the problem if they don’t know it exists. Once that happens, I
think we just need time to let changes happen.
Moreno: What advice would you give to
other young women of color interested in following your path?
Moiya: I know it’s difficult, but
please, please, please try not to compare yourself to your peers. In my
experience, nothing has been more damaging to my emotional or mental wellbeing
than basing my self-worth on the accomplishments of those around me. Just the
fact that you’re even thinking about
pursuing this type of career means you’re already cooler than words can
express.
Moreno: Any final words?
Moiya: Just that I really hope my
winning this prize shows people that anyone can succeed in astronomy. And I
can’t wait to see the changes that happen in the field in the coming years!
1 comment :
I completely agree with this particular comment: "I think it needs to become standard in astronomy departments everywhere to hold mandatory seminars and workshops about the different kinds of inequalities that exist in our communities. We can’t expect people to help us fix the problem if they don’t know it exists."
Thank you for your interview, your hard work, and passion for astronomy!
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