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  1. Jackson returned to academic life in 1999, when she was appointed president of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) in Troy, New York. She was the first Black woman to serve as the president of a major technological institute.

    • Tara Ramanathan
  2. The fictional college depicted in Hangsaman is based in part on Jackson's experiences at Bennington College, as indicated by Jackson's papers in the Library of Congress. [ 50 ] [ 51 ] The event also served as inspiration for her short story "The Missing Girl" (first published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1957, and ...

  3. Dec 19, 2017 · Shirley Ann Jackson arrived at MIT in the fall of 1964 as one of just a handful of black students and the valedictorian of her public high school in Washington, D.C.

  4. Sep 22, 2006 · Jackson attended Roosevelt High School in Washington, D.C., where she took accelerated math and science classes. Jackson graduated as valedictorian in 1964 and encouraged by the assistant principal for boys at her high school, she applied to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

  5. After graduation in 1964, she enrolled at MIT to study theoretical physics, earning her B.S. degree in 1968. [4][5] Jackson elected to stay at MIT for her doctoral work, and received her Ph.D. degree in nuclear physics in 1973, the first African American woman to earn a doctorate degree from MIT.

  6. Shirley Ann Jackson '68, PhD '73 of Washington, D.C. was one of the first black women to earn a Bachelor's degree from MIT, and the first black woman to earn a PhD from the Institute. Today she serves as the 18th president of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and is a permanent member of the MIT Corporation. Timeline: 2010s.

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  8. Shirley Ann Jackson '68, PhD '73 of Washington, D.C. was one of the first black women to earn a Bachelor's degree and the first to earn a PhD from MIT. During her undergraduate and graduate years at the Institute, Jackson advocated for the recruitment and retainment of black students.

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