News

Meet Immigrant Amie Fornah Sankoh, The First Deaf Black Woman With A Doctorate In Stem In The US

(Image: Getty Images)

Graduation day for Amie Fornah Sankoh was more than the completion of a degree. She became the first deaf Black woman to complete her doctorate studies in a science, technology, engineering, and math program in the United States.

According to Chemistry World, Sankoh was awarded her Ph.D. after graduating from the University of Tennessee (UT) Knoxville’s biochemistry and cellular and molecular biology program.

A native of West Africa, Sankoh was sent to the U.S. to live with her father’s best friend at 12 years old after losing her hearing during the civil war. She struggled with her studies as a young deaf student; American doctors could not cure her deafness. Sankoh said she took a few years to learn American Sign Language.

Mathematics was enjoyable for Sankoh as she found it to be more of a visual subject. “Anytime a person talked, I didn’t understand anything, but when they would write out the formulas then I could see it and I could see each step of how to solve that problem,” she said.

In high school, she fell in love with more complex mathematics. That led her into chemistry, which excited her. “I was able to learn about and see chemical reactions–how the reactions occur–and then make predictions,’” she said.

Sankoh worked as a lab technician for Dow Chemical after high school. She obtained both her associate’s degree in laboratory sciences and a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry from Rochester Institute of Technology’s National Technical Institute for the Deaf. She found another laboratory position after college.

“I was participating in research and enjoying it, and learning and experiencing the beauty of it, and then started to discover my own potential,” Fornah explained. “And that led me to go ahead and enter the Ph.D. program at UT Knoxville.”

Sankoh was the featured speaker for UT’s Spring 2023 Graduate Hooding Ceremony. Her Ph.D. research focused on the effects of hormones on plant-pathogen interactions.

Soucre: blackenterprise.com

Related Posts

Elon Musk’s Greed Suffocates Tesla: What’s Left of the Electric Car King?

Tesla is facing a series of problems from falling car sales, plummeting stocks to increasingly declining market share in the US. The biggest question for the company right…

Elon Musk is the billionaire who lost the most money this half year

Elon Musk is the billionaire whose wealth has decreased the most in the first half of this year. Meanwhile, semiconductor tycoon Jensen Huang has earned an additional 64.1…

Californians are buying fewer Teslas. That could be a bad sign for Elon Musk.

Tesla’s new car registrations in California dropped 24% in the second quarter. Governor Gavin Newsom said Tesla is finally starting to see competition from other companies in California….

Elon Musk’s mother reveals she sleeps in garage while visiting her son. Here’s why

In a shocking revelation, Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s mother Maye Musk revealed that she has to ‘sleep in the garage’ while visiting her billionaire son in the Texas,…

Elon Musk’s ‘monster’ rocket plan rocks Florida’s ‘space coast’

While Starship, with its size and power, promises to be a major breakthrough for the space industry, opposition from local communities and environmental groups over noise, vibration, and…

For the first time in history, Mark Zuckerberg could become the richest person on the planet as the most successful billionaire in 2024

The comeback from 6th place in the list of richest billionaires on the planet in early 2024 to the current number 1 in the world is making Mark…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *