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ENTRY POINT! Alumni Say Work Ethic Can Help Overcome Disability
Michael Boor says he needed a fierce work ethic for his sunrise chores
on his family's dairy farm in Horseheads, New York. But, he says, there
was an upside: Perseverance and strong will enabled him to accomplish
something much more impressive.
Michael Boor
Boor secured his internship though a pioneering AAAS program, ENTRY POINT!,
which connects talented science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics (STEM) students who have disabilities with employers from
around the country. Current partners include Lockheed Martin, IBM,
Merck, NASA, NAVAIR, Google, Pfizer, Procter and Gamble, Shell Oil, and
Infosys.
The program offers accepted students with disabilities
internships at top research companies or government research agencies
across the country. The placements match the student's desire for
engaging work with the employer's need for an expanded pool of
technical talent.
While designing vehicles at a top defense
company takes academic discipline and persistence, Boor also overcame
his dyslexia, which poses a challenge when he reads or writes. Boor
said that his dyslexia affected him throughout his K-12 education, but
by the time he got to college, he had learned to take more time
compared to his colleagues to comprehend written material.
"Having
a disability means that you just need to work a little harder to level
the playing field," said Boor. "But overcoming my disability has
enabled me to develop a work ethic that I can apply to other parts of
my life."
Boor spoke alongside six other scientists with disabilities during a
luncheon at the 2009 AAAS Annual Meeting, which brought parents,
teachers, and students to the Hyatt Regency Chicago.
Jinny
Stern, director of the AAAS Project on Science, Technology and
Disability, said that the internships are helpful because the employers
are able to meet the students' needs for assistive technology and other
accommodations. In addition, mentors and students involved in the
program often serve as ambassadors to the wider community.
Currently
in its 14th year, ENTRY POINT! has placed over 550 students in
internships around the country, most or almost all of whom have gone on
to careers in science and engineering.
"U.S. companies are
always on the lookout for the most talented people to work in their
laboratories and offices," said Stern. "Programs like ENTRY POINT! help
companies identify motivated young scientists, matching them with
employers that value and respect their workforce."
The panel was
welcomed to Chicago by Karen Tamley, commissioner of Mayor Richard
Daley's Office for People with Disabilities, which seeks to meet the
diverse needs of the more than 600,000 people with disabilities who
live or work in the Chicago area.
"We are thrilled to be
involved in a project like this that breaks down barriers for people
with disabilities," said Tamley, adding that her office has a program
matching skilled residents of the Chicago area with high-tech jobs.
Chad
Cheetham, a neurobiology graduate student at the University of Alabama,
Birmingham, echoed Boor. "Success only comes before work in the
dictionary," he said.
"Failure is not the act of falling down,
but rather in not getting back up," said Cheetham, who has visual
impairments. After he gets his Ph.D., Cheetham wants to perform
research to find novel solutions for central nervous system disorders.
Chris
Wyble, who is pursing an undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering
at Mercer College in Macon, Georgia, said people with disabilities are
written off by those who think they will not be able to achieve great
things.
An ardent student of history, Wyble said many
politicians underestimated Abraham Lincoln because he didn't have the
connections perceived as necessary to reach the nation's highest
office. But, Wyble continued, Lincoln did have great intelligence and a
strong sense of right and wrong.
"It's never good to be written
off," said Wyble. Wyble has Asperger's syndrome which can affect social
and emotional interaction with peers. "But in Lincoln's case, it worked
out. Maybe someday people will write hundreds of books about us."

