2002 Essay Contest
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Biographies of Women in Math
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2002 AWM Essay Contest:
Honorable Mention in College Category
The Sky is the Limit When it Comes to Mathematics: Dionne Price
By Megan McKinney
When your parents repeatedly tell you that you can be anything that
you want to be and provide you with love and moral support, it is
almost impossible to not follow your dreams. This was the case with
Dionne Price. Dionne consistently received this advice while growing
up in a very close knit African-American family.
While Dionne’s immediate family is fairly typical, consisting of her
mom, her dad, and her older brother, she has a rather large extended
family. Her mother is one of nine children, and her father is one of
ten children, providing numerous aunts, uncles, and cousins. Although
both of her grandparents from her mother’s side have passed away, both
of her grandparents from her father’s side round off the large family
tree. Dionne comes from a very proud and loving family with a strong
spiritual foundation. Throughout her life, she has received enormous
support from her family, especially during her graduate education.
Growing up, Dionne often imitated her teachers and her mother, who is
now a retired teacher. Dionne spent a lot of time in her room, using
her chalkboard to teach her stuffed animals, typically math. Dionne
attended Portsmouth Public Schools until grade 12. After graduating
from high school, she attended Norfolk State University (NSU) in
Norfolk, VA. The application process was not easy, however. She was
a little confused about what she wanted to major in. Although she had
always liked math and was fairly good at it, Dionne also liked
learning about the body and about medicine. After learning of the
shortage of minorities in mathematics, she decided that would be her
major. She chose this major with hopes of one day serving as a role
model and being able to share her enjoyment of math with others. As
an undergraduate, Dionne was an applied math major. She was also a
student in the Dozoretz National Institute for Minorities in Applied
Sciences, which was a program designed to raise the number of
minorities in the sciences. Throughout college, she pursued numerous
summer internships. These included interning at the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT), and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
The most inspiring of these internships was the National Institutes of
Health. This internship gave Dionne her first exposure to
biostatistics, which she found she truly loved. The field allowed her
to use math to solve medical and biological problems. Because of this
internship, she decided to further pursue a career in biostatistics.
After graduating from NSU, Dionne attended graduate school at the
University of North Carolina (UNC), Chapel Hill, where she studied
biostatistics. She then went to Emory University in Atlanta, GA where
she obtained a doctorate in biostatistics in December of 2000. After
graduate school, Dionne accepted a job with the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA).
The FDA consists of a number of different centers, one of which is the
Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), where Dionne works.
The mission of the CDER is to ensure the safety and effectiveness of
drugs/medicine for the American people. During the drug development
process, a company will submit to the FDA a New Drug Application,
which is a document consisting of volumes of information. The
document essentially gives a thorough account of the drug development
process. Dionne’s main focus is on the designs of experiments or
clinical trails. She must determine if the studies that the company
conducted answer the hypotheses of interest. She uses statistics to
analyze or re-analyze data that has been collected from the studies.
Also, Dionne offers statistical advice to companies seeking it from
the FDA. When it is determined that the statistics employed are
appropriate and properly applied, Dionne makes a decision regarding
the evidence provided. Based on her findings, along with those of
doctors, chemists, and others, the drug is approved for marketing or,
not approved. This process contains a lot of teamwork, and when
Dionne has questions or concerns, she has great supervisors who are
willing to assist her. Daily, she attends meetings, reviews new drug
applications, reviews protocols, which may be submitted prior to
submission of a new drug application, and she attends seminars. While
reviewing drug applications, Dionne gets the chance to learn more
about medicine and biology, which helps her when looking at other drug
applications. She is continuously learning new things, while applying
her statistical skills, writing skills, and oral communication skills.
Her favorite part of her job is knowing that she is making a
difference, or a contribution, in the lives of many Americans who are
suffering from different conditions that require medication.
Although Dionne received tremendous family support, one obstacle that
she faced was the belief that she had in herself when entering
graduate school. As an undergraduate at a historically
African-American university with moderate enrollment, she was
surrounded with familiar faces and support. Entering graduate school
was a different story. At UNC, they have one of the highest rated
graduate programs in biostatistics in the country, and Dionne was
competing against students from the nation's so called best schools.
She had low confidence, but she decided that she deserved to be there
and that she was just as good in her skills as the other students.
She did, however, endure negative comments from others, but she used
the comments as fuel to prove them wrong. Eventually, she received
respect from her peers. The same situation occurred at Emory, where
she was the first African-American to earn a doctorate in
biostatistics.
Dionne is currently achieving her hopes of being a role model for
young women. However, she feels that being a role model is an ongoing
process that must occur everyday by maintaining the personal standards
that one has set for themselves and by continuing to pursue any goals
or dreams that have not yet been reached. Although she is very proud
of what she has already accomplished, she does not believe in
"resting on one’s prior accomplishments."
In her free time, Dionne enjoys spending time with her friends and
family. This may include a family dinner, a night of games with her
brother and his family, or a fishing trip on her parents’ boat. She
enjoys reading, especially mystery books, and teaching introductory
level statistics classes at Trinity College in the District of
Columbia. Dionne also enjoys tennis and playing her keyboard.
According to Dionne, "Mathematics can open up doors of
opportunities unimagined. The sky is the limit, and I urge
students interested in mathematics to go for it!!!"
About the author: My name is Megan McKinney. I am currently a junior at Slippery Rock
University in Slippery Rock, PA. I was born in Ellwood City, PA. I am
majoring in mathematics with a special interest area in actuary
science, and minors in statistics and economics. I am currently the
vice-president of the math club and am a member of Kappa Mu Epsilon.
I chose to write this essay because I am inspired by the strength that
some women must have to make it in a mathematical career.
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