A brilliant 27-year-old black American lady, Charlyne Smith, has set an astonishing record at the University of Florida, United States after she became the first black student to bag a PhD in Nuclear Engineering.
Charlyne Smith, who currently occupies the role of Senior Nuclear Energy Analyst on the Nuclear Energy Innovation team at the Breakthrough Institute, has described her achievement as a pathway that will open doors for blacks and marginalized groups.
According to Smith, “It means more opportunity, more options and open doors, especially for the black community and marginalized groups to create and innovate in the nuclear energy space, to solve some of the world’s biggest challenges, and this includes climate change.”
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Charlyne Smith is originally from St. Catherine, Jamaica, she relocated to the US in 2012 to pursue a career in science and technology.
When she arrived in the United States, she studied at the Coppin State University in Baltimore and in 2017, she graduated from the University with a B.Sc. in chemistry and mathematics.
According to Smith, she discovered she was passionate about Nuclear Engineering after she spoke with nuclear scientist Dr. Nickie Peters at a Copin State University (CSU) alumni event, adding that getting a degree in Nuclear Engineering could help bring immediate change to the countries that were in-need of it.
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She proceeded to study in University of Florida and finally becoming the first black woman/person-ever to bag a Ph.D. from the university.
Smith stated that she has plans to help displace fossil fuels energy sources in the Caribbean, and make sure that they’re replaced with clean energy sources like nuclear energy.
“My strategy is to begin with Jamaica; this is because it houses the only nuclear reactor in the Caribbean. Although it is a research reactor, it existence shows experience and technical competence in the nuclear engineering space” according to Charlyne Smith.
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Charlyne, is a co-founder of a non-profit organization called Empowering Garrison Girls (EGGs) whose vision is to fill the need for a global transformation and to drastically reduce gender inequalities by focusing on young ladies that are residing in Jamaican garrison communities.