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Ximena Cid

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ximena Cid
Born
Ximena Cid

Sacramento, California, United States
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley
University of Texas at Arlington
Scientific career
InstitutionsCalifornia State University Dominguez Hills
Doctoral advisorRamón E. López

Ximena Cid is a Chicana and Indigenous American physicist; physics educator and physics education researcher; and advocate for increasing diversity and supporting minority students in STEM and physics. She is currently associate professor and past chair of the physics department at California State University Dominguez Hills. She is recognized as the first Latina student, as well as the first Indigenous student, to earn a PhD in physics from the University of Texas at Arlington.[1] She is also recognized as likely the first Indigenous person to chair a physics department in the country.[2] One of her research specialties is 3-D simulations to support the comprehension of systems such as gravitational fields, electric fields and magnetic fields.[3]

Early life and family

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Ximena Cid was born in Sacramento, California, to Armando Cid and Josephine Talamantez.[2] She has a twin sister.[4] Her father was born in Zacatecas, Mexico, and was an artist who participated in the Royal Chicano Air Force in Sacramento. Her mother is Chicana and Yaqui, and was a cofounder of Chicano Park in San Diego, and also worked within the California Arts Council.[2] Her maternal grandfather was also a member of the Yaqui tribe. Growing up, she and her family were involved in community organizing and activism in the Chicano Movement as well as the American Indian Movement, including marching alongside labor leaders and activists Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta. In high school, she played the viola as well as the violin professionally with Mariachi Femenil las Aguilas, the first all-female mariachi band in northern California[1]

Education

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Cid attended the University of California, Berkeley, for her undergraduate education. Prior to starting courses at Berkeley, she attended the Summer Bridge program on campus the summer before beginning the fall semester. During her undergraduate studies, she worked in a research position with Janet Luhmann as an advisor. She also supported herself through college playing violin in a mariachi band.[5] She graduated in 2005 with a bachelor's degree in astrophysics, with a focus in space physics.[6] At her graduation ceremony, her father, an artist, designed her graduation cap.[4]

After her final undergraduate semester, during which she studied abroad in Italy, Cid returned to completed a summer research program with Ramón E. López at the Florida Institute of Technology.[7] After a yearlong break, Cid began graduate school in 2006 at Florida Institute of Technology, with López as her graduate advisor. She studied there for one year, then moved to the University of Texas, Arlington, in 2007, where López had begun teaching.

For her graduate thesis, she collaborated with cognitive science groups on campus in her research on visual spatial cognition with an emphasis on physics education research.[5] Her thesis was submitted in May 2011 and is titled "Investigations in the impact of visual cognition and spatial ability on student comprehension in physics and space science."[8]

Cid graduated with master's and PhD degrees in physics from UT Arlington in 2011.[9] Upon receiving her degree became the first Latina student, as well as the first Indigenous student, to earn a PhD in physics from UT Arlington.[1] In 2011, she was one of two Indigenous PhD awardees in physics in the country.[10]

Career

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Academic appointments

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After completing her graduate degree, in 2011 Cid began a tenure-track position teaching at Dallas College North Lake Campus in Irving, Texas, and training their faculty on physics education. After six months there, she then accepted a post-doctoral position with the Physics Education Group at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington, with Lillian McDermott. She worked at the Physics Education Group for three and a half years, and while there became involved with tutoring members of the Indigenous community in Seattle; holding workshops for the UW Society for the Advancement of Chicanos/Hispanics and Native Americans in Science (SACNAS); and volunteering with other groups supporting minority students.

In 2015, Cid joined the faculty of California State University, Dominguez Hills, in Carson, California, as an associate professor.[3] In April 2020, she became chair of the university's physics department.[5] She is recognized as the first Indigenous person to hold the role as chair of a physics department in the United States.[2]

Outreach work

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Over her career, Cid has been member of the American Physical Society's Forum on Diversity and Inclusion; has served on American Association of Physics Teacher's diversity committees; and has continued to work with the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science (SACNAS), of which she is a lifetime member.[10] She has also served on the board of the National Society of Hispanic Physicists (NSHP). While on the board, she organized the Día de la Física (Day of Physics) to engage and support Latinx and Indigenous students.

In 2017, Cid joined a five-year collaboration between NASA Heliophysics Education Consortium (NASA HEC) and the American Association of Physics Teachers as a partner in efforts to develop research-based instructional materials. The group, based at Temple University, created a first-year curriculum related to the 2017 solar eclipse that was used in a summer program for students.[11]

Cid organized an "Indigenous in Physics" meeting at the SACNAS annual conference in 2017. In 2020, along with Brittany Kamai, Franklin Dollar, Corey Gray, and other physicists, Cid helped launch the Society for Indigenous Physicists.[12][1][13] The same year, Cid also helped lead the #ShutDownSTEM, #ShutDownAcademia, and #Strike4BlackLives protests to address anti-Black racism in academia and STEM fields.[14]

Select publications

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Awards

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Hickok, Kimberly. "Ximena Cid builds community by cherishing her roots". symmetry magazine. Retrieved 2022-08-29.
  2. ^ a b c d SACNAS (October 2020). "2020 SACNAS Featured Speaker: Ximena C. Cid, PhD". youtube.com. Retrieved 30 August 2020.
  3. ^ a b "In Search of Diversity in the World of Physics". news.csudh.edu. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  4. ^ a b Dr. Ximena Cid [2021 SACNAS-OSU Keynote Event], retrieved 2022-08-30
  5. ^ a b c Physics, American Institute of (2021-09-11). "Ximena Cid". www.aip.org. Retrieved 2022-08-29.
  6. ^ Ximena Cid – Physics/Astrophysics, retrieved 2022-08-30
  7. ^ Ximena Cid – Break Before Grad School, retrieved 2022-08-30
  8. ^ Cid, Ximena (May 2011). "Investigations in the impact of visual cognition and spatial ability on student comprehension in physics and space science" (PDF). rc.library.uta.edu. Retrieved 29 August 2022.
  9. ^ a b "2018 Homer L. Dodge Citation for Distinguished Service to AAPT to be Awarded to Ximena C. Cid". www.aapt.org. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  10. ^ a b March for Science Los Angeles 2018 – Ximena Cid, retrieved 2022-08-30
  11. ^ "Ximena Cid Stands on 'Path of Totality' After Teaching STEM 0 Students about Total Solar Eclipses". news.csudh.edu. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  12. ^ Kamai, Brittany; Cid, Ximena; Quichocho, Xandria R.; Little, Angela; Daniel, Kathryne; Gray, Corey; Neilson, Hilding; Blue Bird, Julia (Fall 2020). "Indigenous Peoples Exist Within Physics" (PDF). CSWP and COM Gazette. 39 (2): 4–9 – via American Physical Society.
  13. ^ "About". Society of Indigenous Physicists. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  14. ^ "Engagement and Activism in Modern Physics Education". news.csudh.edu. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  15. ^ "AAPT 2021 Winter Fellows Named". aapt.org. Retrieved 2022-08-30.
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