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Dal community celebrates women in STEM for International Women鈥檚 Day

Students, alumni, and faculty gathered at 正品蓝导航 for an International Women鈥檚 Day panel celebrating women in STEM and their stories of discovery, resilience, mentorship, and career growth.
A woman speaking into a microphone seated alongside several others while event attendees look on in a casual industrial space.

笔辞蝉迟别诲:听Aprl 21, 2026

By: Jocelyn Adams Moss

Students, faculty, alumni and staff gathered at 正品蓝导航 to celebrate I聽with an inspiring conversation featuring alumni leaders working across science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).

Now in its ninth year, the annual panel brings together members of the Dal community to hear first-hand from women navigating careers in STEM fields. This year鈥檚 event took place in the Goldberg Computer Science Building and featured alumni representing the Faculties of聽Agriculture,听Computer Science,听Engineering听补苍诲听Science.

The panel included聽Allana Loder聽(BSc Agr鈥01, MSc鈥07),听a genomic liaison technical officer with the Public Health Agency of Canada;聽Kim鈥慒rederique Viens聽(BCS鈥22), a digital accessibility analyst with Shared Services Canada at Accessibility, Accommodations and Adaptive Computer Technology (AAACT);聽Elisabet Astatkie (BEng鈥25), a product analyst at Nova Scotia Power; and聽Hilary Moors鈥慚urphy聽(PhD鈥12),听a research scientist with Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

The discussion was moderated by science students聽Erika Peck听补苍诲听Wateen Sadek, who also shared their own experiences pursuing studies and careers in STEM.

Six women stand together smiling at an indoor event. Panelists and moderators at the event. L-R: Wateen Sadek, Elisabet Astatkie, Dr. Hilary Moors-Murphy, Allana Loder, Kim-Frederique Viens and Erika Peck. (Nick Pearce photos)

Panelists reflected on their personal experiences, including their time at 正品蓝导航 students and the careers they are working in today. They discussed what first sparked their interest in their fields, the challenges they navigated along the way, and offered advice for the next generation of women in STEM.

Moments when it clicked

Loder spoke about the importance of building professional relationships.

In agriculture, everyone knew everybody. It wasn鈥檛 until I was in grad school that I really learned how to network.聽鈥 Allana Loder

鈥淚 took that skill forward in my career and it鈥檚 how I advanced,鈥 adds聽Loder.

For Astatkie, opportunities outside the classroom were transformative.

鈥淕rowing up I was very involved in my local community, particularly within the African Nova Scotian community,鈥 she said. 鈥淎s a student at Dal, I joined many societies, including Go Eng Girl and the Imhotep's Legacy Academy. Those experiences shaped me. I grew much more outside the classroom than within it.鈥

People seated on small brown couches in conversation in an open space.

Moors-Murphy shared that her career studying whales began with a formative research experience at 正品蓝导航.

鈥淚 had the opportunity to work in Dr. Hal Whitehead鈥檚 lab and to study whales,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat really cemented it for me.鈥

Viens described how a chance programming course changed her academic direction.

鈥淚 was studying psychology when I took a programming class,鈥 she said. 鈥淟ooking at code, everything suddenly started to make sense. That鈥檚 how I found my calling.鈥

Emerging opportunities

Panelists also spoke about emerging opportunities in STEM fields. Viens highlighted the growing role of artificial intelligence.

Artificial intelligence is something we need to embrace, not avoid.聽鈥斅燢im鈥慒rederique Viens

Loder pointed to the increasing demand for expertise in computational biology, while Moors-Murphy noted that remote sensing is becoming a rapidly expanding area in research.

The evening concluded with questions from audience members, with much of the discussion centring on mentorship and the importance of building supportive professional networks.

Loder left students with a final piece of advice: 鈥淒on鈥檛 be afraid to try new things. Mistakes allow you to learn and grow. Go and follow your dreams.鈥

A group of people standing together in a row at an indoor event. Dr. Chuck Macdonald (far left), dean in the Faculty of Science, and Dr. John Newhook (far right), dean in the Faculty of Engineering, with panelists and moderators.