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This content was published: July 4, 2016. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.

Student Laurie Garza is reaching for the stars, and Mars, in her academic pursuits

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LaurieGarza3It was a battle that Laurie Garza and her business co-workers couldn’t lose.

In a hangar facility in the California desert, their goal was to gain the edge over three other companies to convince NASA that their Mars rover prototype was the best for America’s next mission. As part of the high-pressure pitch, there were obstacle courses, simulated rover rescues, and a visit with the space agency’s chief scientist.

“I was thrust into a pressure cooker of competition,” Garza recalled. “It was a truly intense, productive and worthwhile experience. We worked our butts off.”

Garza’s company wasn’t real, rather it was a fictitious one that she and a team of hand-picked scholars from around the country set up as part of a once-in-a-lifetime learning experience. She traveled to NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, Calif., to participate in the NASA Community College Aerospace Scholars Project (NCAS). Garza was selected as one of 44 community college students from across the U.S. to take part in the five-week scholars program.

At Armstrong, students formed teams and established pseudo companies interested in Mars exploration. Each team was responsible for developing and testing a prototype rover, forming a company’s infrastructure, managing a budget, and developing a communications plan. In addition, scholars were given tours of facilities and briefings by NASA subject matter experts.

“I was able to get my engineering on,” Garza said. “Our team purposefully chose roles that were designed to get us out of our comfort zone. I served as design and research engineer, but my area is astrophysics.”

Her favorite moment was when she and her fellow scholars got to fly a F-18 simulator.

Garza's dream job is to return to Hawaii where she used to live, and work at the Mauna Kea Observatories for the Institute for Astronomy.

Garza’s dream job is to return to Hawaii where she used to live, and to work at the Mauna Kea Observatories for the Institute for Astronomy.

“I got to feel the g-forces and had to land it without crashing, which I was able to do,” she said.

NCAS is a project funded in part by the Minority University Research and Education Program, which recruits underrepresented and underserved students in science, technology, engineering and mathematics for careers in science. It helps NASA attract and retain students in STEM disciplines critical to its future missions, which include missions to Mars and beyond.

“NCAS not only inspires community college students to advance in STEM fields, but it also opens doors for future careers at NASA,” said Tania B. Davis, Minority University Research and Education Project (MUREP) manager. “It is rewarding to see the progression of a student from NCAS participant to NASA colleague.”

Garza, who is an Oregon Space Grant recipient living in Happy Valley, almost missed the chance at the NASA experience. She learned about the internship late but was able to submit her application two days before the deadline.

“I whipped up an essay and begged my instructors for recommendations,” she smiled. “They were kind enough to oblige.”

Garza has NASA in her blood. Her father was an engineer for the space agency in Houston and worked on the Apollo, Gemini and Saturn rocket projects.

“My family lived 100 yards from the back gate of NASA,” Garza remembered.

Her life hit a tragic stretch recently that caused her to re-assess things. A former marketing executive with Intel Corp., Garza tragically lost half of her family in a little more than a year, which understandably caused her to go into a depression.

“I couldn’t get out of bed for a long time,” she remembered. “But I enrolled in a class at PCC and my life was reenergized. That was a big life change.”

Garza would go on to earn the Amo De Bernardis Scholarship through the PCC Foundation, become a member of the national two-year honor society Phi Theta Kappa, establish a physics society, and win recognition on the President’s List with a 4.0 grade-point average. She wants to transfer to Yale next year to finish her astrophysics degree once she graduates from PCC. Her dream job is to return to Hawaii where she used to live, and work at the Mauna Kea Observatories for the Institute for Astronomy.

“In astrophysics, I just want to contribute,” Garza explained. “I’m not out to change the world, but every piece of work by a scientist, no matter how small, contributes to the world.”

About James Hill

James G. Hill, an award-winning journalist and public relations writer, is the Director of Public Relations at Portland Community College. A graduate of Portland State University, James has worked as a section editor for the Newberg Graphic... more »

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Comments

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x by Darcy 7 years ago

Congratulations Laurie!! You are an inspiration!! I wish you well in your dreams and goals – Go STEM Gal !!! YOU ROCK!

x by Lauren Shroll 7 years ago

You go Laurie! I’m so proud of you and all that you’ve been able to achieve. All of your hard has paid off. You shoot for infinity and beyond!

x by Jen Poinar 7 years ago

Congrats Laurie! Thanks for all your hard work helping students access scholarships at SE and I wish you all the best with your future endeavors and adventures!

x by Renee Rosenkrans 6 years ago

Laurie…Seestah…OhmyGOSH…wow. I looked for you so many times…thought the worst. Just now found you on a fluke at the suggestion of a near perfect stranger…got so excited to reach out I barely skimmed your article. I’m speechless…with more than I can say.
Hope this gets back to you with my e-mail. Would love to catch up with you. If that’s even possible!
“The mere thought”
Way to go Goddess!!
Love and Light
Always