Guyanese woman ‘reaching for the stars’ as a NASA researcher – Read Full Story Here!

US-based Guyanese Keanna Jardine will soon join a NASA research team to study the OSIRIS-Rex samples at Arizona State University.

In an emotional interview with the News Room GUYANA on Friday, the Planetary Scientist recounted her journey from Durban Street, Lodge, and Georgetown to the USA.

At 10 years old, Jardine migrated to the United States of America with her parents, Anthony Jardine and Osnah Jardine. There she completed her middle and high school education before advancing to Adelphi University and then the University of Central Florida where she got her Master’s and PHd in Physics, with a concentration in Planetary Science.

“Growing up in Guyana I’ve always, you know looked at the stars in my grandmother’s yard so that inspired my journey and interest in what I’m doing.

“Living in Guyana you don’t see a path to these career opportunities and so when I moved, my goal was not to focus on astronomy, physics, or planetary science at all but as I moved through my studies, opportunities arise and let me full circle back to what my initial interest was growing up in Guyana,” Jardine said.

During her sophomore year at college, her mother died in a car crash during a visit to Guyana. The family never got justice following the accident but for Jardine, this was her defining moment.

“The biggest challenge was losing my mom. She died here in Guyana, that was a challenge then and it still is now.

“I had to push and that same professor really held on to me and said “you’re going to finish” and my dad was a big supporter. He said all I want you to do is finish College. I ended up pushing through and even passed that…It is a realization of how far we still need to go. Being a woman, being black in America, there’s a lot of obstacles that we have to overcome to even be where we need to be,” Jardine said.

With the support of a professor who encouraged her to move out of her comfort zone and pursue studies in planetary science and her family, she was able to graduate and secure her spot with NASA.

“You have to push and find opportunities, don’t put yourself in a box. You have to search and find… when you want something you have to go for it,” Jardine advises. (News Room GUYANA)

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