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Meet: Dionne Broxton Jackson

Analytical Chemist
NASA Kennedy Space Center
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Who I Am
My name is Dionne Broxton Jackson. I live
in Daytona Beach Florida with my husband Brian. We will be celebrating
our third anniversary next week! It is still amazing to me that we went
to the same high school, our homes were within a three-block radius and
we never knew each other! My parents are Leon and Joan Broxton, and I
have four sisters (Pat, Andrea, Monique and Monica) . The majority of
my family still lives in Daytona.
My Career Journey
When I graduated from Spruce Creek High School (Daytona
Beach, Florida) in 1987, I knew that I wanted to be a Chemist. This decision
was made after I participated in the NASA SHARP program. After that great
experience, I thought I would never see NASA again! I am happy to say
I was wrong. Before graduating from high school, Mrs. Buchanan, manager
of the SHARP program, guided me in applying for a scholarship program
NASA had recently implemented with Spelman College in Atlanta. The great
thing about this program was that it included a summer internship with
NASA. During the summers of 1988 and 1989, I worked with the Bionetics
Corporation in the Environmental Monitoring Laboratory. In the summer
of 1990, I worked in the laboratory that I am in now. At that time, it
was called the Microchemical Analysis Laboratory. I graduated from Spelman
College in 1991 with a B.S. degree in Chemistry and began working for
NASA in June. While working for NASA, I was accepted for a Masters
program at the University of Central Florida and graduated in 1994 with
a Masters degree in Industrial Engineering.
What I Do
I work in the Materials Science Laboratory (MSL)
at Kennedy Space Center. The function of the MSL is to evaluate materials
and processes associated with flight hardware and ground support equipment.
I am responsible for testing and identifying metal alloys. Materials are
evaluated and selected for their compatibility to their environment. Failures,
resulting in loss of property and sometimes lives, occur when materials
are incompatible with their environment. For example, the Space Coast
environment is very corrosive because of the nearby ocean. So we use metals
that are corrosion resistant (cres) or we apply a coating to the material
so that it gives it a cres property.
Even though our focus is KSC, the MSL also supports
other NASA agencies, private industry such as Lockheed-Martin and Westinghouse
and local schools. Some of the techniques that are used are inductively
coupled plasma spectroscopy and x-ray fluorescene spectroscopy. I will
soon be submitting journals on each of these techniques to explain in
more detail how they work!
Influences
I have been very fortunate to have had many role
models in my life. First and foremost are my parents. They were always
very supportive of my sisters and myself. We always knew that we could
depend them. They provided us with love and a strong Christian foundation.
My sisters and I could also depend on our extended family: aunts, uncles,
and cousins. Another important person that helped to shape my life was
my high school chemistry teacher, Mrs. Aumiller. She was enthusiastic
and made learning a lot of fun. She always made chemistry seem simple
so that we could understand it and really learn to appreciate it. She
is still teaching chemistry today at Spruce Creek High School. My church
family was also a big influence in my life in prayers and encouragement.
Future Plans and Goals
The University of Central Florida will soon be
offering a doctoral program in Materials Science, and I plan to begin
preparing for that in the near future. As far as work goes, I will continue
to work in the Lab, but I am also involved in mentoring programs, contractor
surveillance, and a mission to Mars project. For the Mars project, we
are simulating a Martian environment to do testing of materials.
Hobbies
I love to read, and I love to sing in my church
choir. However, one of my all-time favorites is shopping! I give meaning
to the expression "shop till you drop!" On Tuesdays, I mentor
young girls in the 2nd through 12th grades. I also
love travelling. It is my goal to visit every state in the United States
in my lifetime and also to visit Europe.
Advice
READ, READ and READ!!!! I cannot emphasize enough
the importance of reading. We have allowed TV to come into our homes and
dictate our lives. We need to turn the television off and read more. We
need to encourage our youth and the adults that "Reading is Fundamental".
It is the basis of all that we do. READ, READ and then READ again!!!!
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