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Saturday, February 22, 2025

“By Us, For Us”: First Queer Science Conference Creates Connections

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Forty-three high school students and 13 members of the UConn community  came together to celebrate science – and themselves – in the first https://inclusion.engr.uconn.edu/queer-science-2/, held Saturday, June 11, in Storrs.

The one-day, volunteer-driven event connected the students with  faculty, staff, and graduate and undergraduate students at UConn who  work in STEM disciplines, with the goal of supporting Connecticut youth  while offering state-of-the-art laboratory experiences and opportunities  for hands-on science demonstrations.

“I wanted to show LGBTQIA+ teenagers that there are people who are  like them in all fields of science, technology, engineering, and math,  because we don’t get a lot of representation in those fields,” says Anna  Marie LaChance ’17 (ENG) ’20 GCCI ’22 Ph.D., who organized the  inaugural event with support from the School of Engineering’s Vergnano  Institute for Inclusion; the nonprofit organization Out in Science,  Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics, or uconntact.uconn.edu/organization/ostem; and https://rainbowcenter.uconn.edu/r.

LaChance modeled UConn’s conference on the Queer Science program at the http://queerscience.umn.edu/,  which she learned about at an oSTEM conference in 2019.

“I met the ‘Leslie Knope’ of this project, Dr. Julie Johnston, and  she told me all about Queer Science, and I was like, UConn needs this –  UConn absolutely needs this,” she says. “As soon as I got back from that  conference, I started planning in my head, talking to Julie, literally  DMing on Twitter, and I started working with the School of Engineering  to pull off Queer Science at UConn.”

Group photo of those who attended the Queer Science Conference. (Photo courtesy of Anna Marie LaChance)

LaChance began recruiting fellow volunteers from a variety of  disciplines, but plans for the in-person event were sidetracked by the  onset of the global pandemic in March 2020. In 2021, having completed  her doctorate in chemical engineering and then working with the Vergnano  Institute, LaChance was able to return to planning for the conference  with renewed focus on crafting an event that emphasized both  professionalism and networking.

“My number one priority was pulling off some version of Queer Science  at UConn,” she says. “I wanted to emphasize people in STEM who had  LGBTQ identities themselves. I wanted this to be ‘by us for us,’ in a  way, so that students, when they show up to the event, could be  surrounded by people who are like them in terms of gender and sexuality.  That was really important to me from the get go, only queer people  working on this event.”

Just in time for Pride Month, the event was entirely free for  participants, who were all high school students ranging in age from 14  to 18.

“We tried to structure it so that we would do a bunch of tours of  different lab spaces and other UConn resources in the morning,” LaChance  explains, “and then, in the afternoon, sit down, do some science, and  get some hands-on experience with real-life science and instruments that  real grad students and real faculty use.”

Over the course of the day, the students toured UConn’s Rainbow Center; learned about plants and insects in the http://florawww.eeb.uconn.edu/; and visited the world-class https://mars.uconn.edu Laboratory.

Group learning about different oceanography instruments

(Photo courtesy of Anna Marie LaChance)

They caught bugs with Abigail Hayes (they/she), an EEB post-doctoral  researcher and entomologist. They learned about water density with  doctoral student and ecosystem toxicologist Anika Agrawal (she/they)  from the Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, using  temperature and salinity to separate a water sample in the colors of the  bisexual pride flag. They plotted LGBTQIA+ history on a tree core with  Master’s student Jillian Dyer (they/them) and learned how to analyze gas  composition from soil samples with research technician Nicolette Nelson  (she/her).

“We got people from the biomedical engineering department, people  from natural resources and the environment, and people from  psychological sciences,” says LaChance. “All of these resulted in really  great presentations. All the presenters, the volunteers themselves, not  only talked about the science, but also their journey into queerness,  their LGBT identities, and how that folded into their STEM identities  and affected how they navigate STEM fields.”

The conference made for a day full of connection, and also emotion,  for both the volunteers and the participants, who praised the science as  well as the inclusive environment the organizers created.

“Throughout the day, people came up to me and were like, ‘I’m crying  because I got my first binder,’” says LaChance of the Rainbow Center  visit, where students were able to select donated items from the  center’s gender-affirming closet. “One student told me, ‘I have never  been this open about my gender or sexuality before in my life.’ And that  was beautiful.”

With help from the Vergnano Institute for Inclusion, LaChance has  already secured funding for next year’s conference, officially making  this year’s event the first annual UConn Queer Science Conference.

“It was a day of joy, of connection, of networking,” she says. “and  everyone came away from the event with more friends, more community, and  more knowledge about STEM subjects, including knowledge about why they  should come to UConn.”

Source: https://today.uconn.edu/2022/06/by-us-for-us-first-queer-science-conference-creates-connections/

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