Top 20 Quotes & Sayings by Judith Love Cohen

Explore popular quotes and sayings by Judith Love Cohen.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Judith Love Cohen

Judith Love Cohen was an American aerospace engineer. Cohen worked as an electrical engineer on the Minuteman missile, the science ground station for the Hubble Space Telescope, the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite, and the Apollo Space Program. After her retirement as an engineer, she founded a children's multimedia publishing company, eventually publishing more than 20 titles before her death in 2016.

I really don't think boys are naturally better at math and science than girls.
You only think about things when you see people doing it. Most girls know now they can be lawyers. They know that they can work in an emergency room - they've seen 'ER.' But I don't recall that anyone has seen scientists on a large scale, except for a few paleontologists in 'Jurassic Park.'
Let's face it - selling weapons systems to the Army isn't women's work. — © Judith Love Cohen
Let's face it - selling weapons systems to the Army isn't women's work.
Do something you really like to do and get paid well for it.
That's what happens in three-dimensional animation, you tell the computer what the subject is like and the computer can figure what it would look like from any camera's point of view.
The only time I saw a woman doing anything interesting - I had a math teacher who was a woman. So I decided, OK, I'll be a math teacher.
A lot of people who are marketing to girls are going to where they are, not to where they ought to be.
There were eight women in my graduating class.
It scares me to death if Affirmative Action goes away.
I don't like dragons and blood all that much.
Girls are interested in computers, there just are not many programs out there for them.
We seem to be the only software company for girls that is pushing science and getting away from stereotypical behavior.
Girls can be anything they want to be. Why be a nurse, for example, when you can be a doctor?
I made a difference. I changed things, but it's a little too late for me.
Women today have so many opportunities in fields like engineering. The work is new and engineers are making things work, making the impossible possible. I want girls to know about the opportunities out there.
One thing that did happen to me, though - in high school, there was a club to help prepare people for scholarships and they wouldn't let girls take the class. But I studied for it, and that year I was the only one from the high school who got the scholarship. That was my vindication.
We're trying to get away from the three D's: dresses, dolls and diaries.
When I was in fifth grade, there were many girls who were good at math, but when I was in junior high school, I was taking intermediate algebra and I looked around the class and realized I was the only girl.
By the time you get to college, it's much too late because you haven't had the math or science that you would need and, therefore, you're not prepared to really study engineering.
My father would talk to me about the moon, and to me it was mysterious and poetic, like a large, beautiful, honey-colored pearl. — © Judith Love Cohen
My father would talk to me about the moon, and to me it was mysterious and poetic, like a large, beautiful, honey-colored pearl.
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