DepEd celebrates Filipina scientists, role models on International Day of Women and Girls in Science

In celebration of the 2022 International Day of Women and Girls in Science, the Department of Education (DepEd) on Friday highlighted outstanding Filipina scientists to inspire more young girls to venture into the field of science.

“I am proud of the women who continue to uphold gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls involved in the field of science. This should abolish long-standing biases and gender stereotypes that are steering girls and women away from science-related fields,” Secretary Leonor Magtolis Briones said.

Undersecretary San Antonio highlighted that celebrating women and girls, who have contributed to science, is something that deserves the support of anyone passionate about equity, sciences, nation-building through a lot of innovations that only those with scientific minds can contribute.

“I fully believe that the Philippines is one country that is among the most gender-equal countries in the world, especially in dealing with gender issues, concerns, and development,” Undersecretary San Antonio said.

Eminent Filipino women scientists Dr. Rowena Cristina Guevara, Undersecretary for Research and Development of the Department of Science and Technology, Dr. Gay Jane Perez, Deputy Director-General of the Philippine Space Agency, and Dr. Maria Ruth Pineda-Cortel, Researcher at the UST Research Center for the Natural Sciences and finalist in the ASEAN-US Science Prize for Women 2020, shared messages of empowerment, while the inspiring story of Philippine Genome Center Executive Director Dr. Cynthia Palmes-Saloma on her journey to being a scientist was also featured.

“Sa Department of Science and Technology sa aming research and development grants, halos kalahati ng ating project leaders ay mga kababaihan at higit po diyan sa ating mga scholars sa science and engineering, halos kalahati rin po ay kababaihan,” Dr. Guevara shared.

On the other hand, Dr. Cortel noted that while the gender gap hinders the dreams of women and girls to contribute to science, she believes “that if we work together as one, as women and girls of science, we can smash stereotyping and defeat discrimination against women and girls in science.”

“The event is an opportunity for us women to serve as beacons of hope to each other, especially to the young girls of today. I encourage all women to persevere and break the barriers so that women in this field will one day be the norm rather than an exception,” Dr. Perez emphasized.

The International Day of Women and Girls in Science, observed annually by the UN on February 11, is implemented by UNESCO and UN-Women in collaboration with institutions and civil society partners that aim to promote women and girls in science. (DepEd)

-rir

Popular

PBBM’s satisfaction rating tops other PH gov’t offices in latest survey

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet In the latest nationwide survey conducted by Tangere on 1,500 respondents from May 8 to 9, the Office of the President...

Palace: Int’l, local watchdogs tapped to ensure ‘clean, honest’ polls

By Ruth Abbey Gita-Carlos | Philippine News Agency The government is working with international and local watchdogs to ensure “clean and honest” midterm elections on...

DBM approves allowance increase of teachers, poll workers

By Brian Campued The Department of Budget and Management (DBM) on Friday announced that it has approved a P2,000 across-the-board increase in the compensation of...

24/7 threat monitoring center launched vs. online disinformation

By Raymond Carl Dela Cruz | Philippine News Agency The inter-agency “Task Force KKK (Katotohanan, Katapatan, Katarungan) sa Halalan” launched on Friday its new threat...