MURFREESBORO — MTSU chemistry professor Judith Iriarte-Gross found herself
“totally surprised” when her name was announced as the inaugural recipient of
the ATHENA International Leadership Award.
“There were 13 other wonderful,
amazing nominees, and all of them deserved it,” said Iriarte-Gross, who was
handed the “prestigious award” by Martha Mayhood Mertz, the ATHENA
International Awards founder and event guest speaker.
The award, presented by
RutherfordCABLE, a women-in-business networking organization, was the highlight
of the event, which was held May 15 at Stones River Country Club.
Dr. Jean Anne Rogers, 2014
Rutherford ATHENA chair, called Iriarte-Gross “such a deserving recipient of
our inaugural Rutherford ATHENA Award, and we salute her.”
MTSU’s June Anderson Center and
National Women’s History Month Committee nominated Iriarte-Gross. She and the
other nominees were recognized for their exceptional professional and personal
leadership, accomplishments and contributions.
“I feel truly honored to receive
this award,” said Iriarte-Gross, who has led the charge to make young women
aware of careers in STEM, which stands for science, technology, engineering and
mathematics. “My passion is to inspire girls to explore STEM, provide girls
with role models and see these young women graduate as STEM professionals.”
Iriarte-Gross said women comprise
less than 25 percent of the STEM workforce, and mentors can make a huge impact
and difference.
“Without my mentors, I would not
be a Ph.D. chemist,” she said.
Rogers said the honoree “has used
her life story to give back” and “has been a strong advocate for girls, not
only encouraging them to go to college, but also to major in nontraditional
STEM fields.”
Mertz read the inscription on the
back of the statuette, a signed and numbered piece of art. It stated: “What is
honored in a country will be cultivated here.”
Iriarte-Gross helped plant another
Expanding Your Horizons seed in Tennessee May 17. She and her husband, Charles
Gross, traveled to Morristown for the first East Tennessee EYH Conference at
Walters State Community College. The 18th annual EYH at MTSU will be
held Saturday, Sept. 20.
Iriarte-Gross was a February 2013
recipient of the President’s Silver Column Award, presented by MTSU President
Sidney A. McPhee. She had earned numerous other honors in her career.
Other nominees with MTSU
connections included:
• Faye Johnson, assistant for
special initiatives to the MTSU provost and alumna, nominated by the League of
Women Voters of Murfreesboro and Rutherford County;
• Ayne Cantrell, an alumna and
professor emerita in English and teacher in women’s studies, who was nominated
by the American Association of University Women of Murfreesboro, whom she now
works with to bring attention to women’s rights;
• Jacqueline Wade, retired
associate professor of social work and lecturer in the African-American studies
program and founder and president of Wade Educational Programming and
Consultation Services, nominated by Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, Pi Nu Omega
Chapter;
• Melanie Clifford Cavender,
alumna and older adult coordinator with the Rutherford Community Family YMCA,
which nominated her;
• Tara MacDougall, CEO of
Discovery Center at Murfree Spring, former marketing and development director
for the Division of Continuing Studies and an alumna married to chemistry
professor Preston MacDougall, nominated by RutherfordCABLE;
• Meagan Flippin, alumna and
president and CEO of the United Way of Rutherford and Cannon Counties,
nominated by the Junior League of Murfreesboro;
• Lori Williams, 28-year employee
and controller for Murfreesboro Electric Department and alumna, nominated by
Chi Omega fraternity; and
• Felicia Shirley, alumna and
Nissan North America Smyrna plant finance team member, nominated by Nissan
Smyrna Women’s Business Synergy Team.
“We at the June Anderson Center
and NWHM Committee are so proud of your well-deserved accomplishment,” Barbara
Scales, director of the June Anderson Center for Women and Nontraditional
Students, wrote in an email circulated across campus.
Scales also sent “best wishes” to Iriarte-Gross,
an MTSU faculty member since 1996 and director of the MTSU WISTEM (Women in
STEM) Center, for being nominated by Provost Brad Bartel for the 2014 White
House Office of Science and Technology Policy and National Science Foundation
Presidential Awards for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering
Mentoring. The award will be announced later this year.
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