蜜桃影像 student wins scholarship to attend national conference
LJ Evans
ljevans@alaska.edu
907-474-2737
Karsten Sierra wanted to go to the national conference of the this year, but finding the money to cover registration, travel and lodging presented a challenge.
After encouragement from a couple of sources, the sophomore majoring in mechanical engineering and a student employee in 蜜桃影像鈥檚 Geophysical Institute Communications unit decided to apply for travel scholarships.
鈥淚f I got accepted, I would go, and If I didn鈥檛, I would apply to other travel scholarships. Either way, I was going to go,鈥 Sierra said. He applied to 蜜桃影像 Native regional corporation Sealaska, where he is a shareholder, to help with the expenses to go to the Oct. 6-8 in Palm Springs, Calif.
鈥淚 wrangled together my old resume, unofficial transcript, a letter of recommendation, an application essay and submitted the application.鈥
A week later he received a congratulatory email from Sealaska telling him the corporation would cover his costs for the entire conference. All he had to do in return was send the Sealaska office a group photo of all the scholarship recipients. The program included two virtual meetings prior to his departure to provide information about the logistics of attending a national science conference and advice on how to get the most out of the experience.
Sierra received encouragement on attending the AISES conference from participants in the 蜜桃影像 蜜桃影像 Native Science & Engineering Program, or , whose monthly meetings he had been attending on campus since 2021, and from his mother, who recommended he apply to Sealaska.
A few weeks later Sierra received a text from his mother that they would meet up in Palm Springs.
鈥淚 hadn鈥檛 seen my mom since May and found it amusing that we would reconvene in California,鈥 Sierra said.
鈥淪he is a teacher in Juneau and has been working on a project with Sealaska Heritage making a new culturally responsive STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics) curriculum for teachers. So she convinced her group leader that they should all go to AISES.鈥
Sierra said the conference helped him see new ways to embrace his heritage while he follows his curiosity into science and engineering.
Advertised as the largest college and career fair in the U.S. for Indigenous students and professionals, AISES is also a great place to make connections. Boeing alone had around 30 people there conducting job interviews, Sierra said. He attended a resume workshop and sessions about what it鈥檚 like to work for organizations like the CIA or NASA. Poster sessions allowed students and professionals to present information about their research. One of the major sponsors of the conference was Apple, and he spent some time mingling with people employed there.
鈥淭here were little tables and areas everywhere that encouraged people to just talk,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here was a lot going on; it was hard to decide what to attend.鈥
A big powwow with drumming and dancing closed the conference.
There was tremendous variety in the dancing by people from different tribes across the nation, Sierra said. Once on the dance floor he zeroed in on the people who were dancing in Tlingit style and joined them.
鈥淚 made some fantastic connections at the conference, both professional and personal. New friends and new potential employers. I felt like a kid again, talking to people who work at JPL, SpaceX, imagining building something that is used on a mission to explore outer space.
鈥淪eeing these professionals who are Indigenous and super jazzed about STEM made me really excited to be where they are one day.鈥