Full Name Donna Shirley | Name Donna Shirley | |
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Born 1941 Pauls Valley, OK Occupation Aerospace and mechanical engineer, author Books The Land That Lost Its Green Awards Glamour Woman of the Year Award |
Oklahoma stories donna shirley honorary martian
Donna Lee Shirley (born 1941) is a former manager of Mars Exploration at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. She is the author of the book Managing Martians: The Extraordinary Story of a Woman's Lifelong Quest to Get to Mars—and of the Team Behind the Space Robot That Has Captured the Imagination of the World.
Contents
- Oklahoma stories donna shirley honorary martian
- Donna shirley 2013 jaymac distinguished alumni
- Early life
- Education
- Career
- Works
- References
Asteroid 5624 Shirley was named in her honor.
Donna shirley 2013 jaymac distinguished alumni
Early life
Shirley was born in Pauls Valley, Oklahoma and grew up in Wynnewood, Oklahoma. As a young girl, Shirley was actively involved with her Girl Scouts troop and played the oboe. Shirley was the only girl at her high school not to take home economics. Instead, Shirley took mechanical drawing. Her interest in Mars and space exploration began when she read The Sands of Mars by Arthur C. Clarke. She began taking flying lessons at age 15. She earned a pilot's license at 16. After graduating from college, Shirley took up skiing and hiking in California.
Education
During Shirley's junior year at the University of Oklahoma, she became engaged and decided to change her degree to professional-writing in order to graduate faster. A short time later, Shirley and her fiancé split up. She went to work as a specification writer for McDonnell Aircraft for about a year and eventually decided to return to OU to complete her engineering degree. She graduated from University of Oklahoma with a BS in Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering in 1965, and from the University of Southern California with a MS in Aerospace Engineering.
Career
She worked at the Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) from 1966 to 1998. She was Mars Exploration Program manager, and led teams for Mars Pathfinder and Sojourner (rover). In 1997 she was inducted into the Women in Technology Hall of Fame, and in 1998 she was inducted into the Oklahoma Aviation and Space Hall of Fame. In 2000 she won the Washington Award and in 2003 was inducted in the Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame. She was an associate dean of engineering for three years at the University of Oklahoma between 2000 and 2003. She then went on to be the founding director of the Science Fiction Museum in Seattle. After retiring from the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame in 2004, she became President of Managing Creativity, a platform where she shares her strategies for using the collective creativity of groups to develop ideas, then efficiently and effectively turn them into products. She has become a well-known educator, speaker, and consultant who draws from her prior professional experience.
Shirley officially retired as manager of the Mars Exploration Program on August 21, 1998.