Carlotta Berry | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | Spelman College (B.S.) Georgia Institute of Technology (B.S.) Wayne State University (M.S.) Vanderbilt University (Ph.D.) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Robotics Education |
Institutions | Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Tennessee State University |
Carlotta Berry is an American academic in the field of engineering. She is a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. She is co-director of the Rose Building Undergraduate Diversity (ROSE-BUD) program. She is a co-founder of Black In Engineering and a co-founder of Black In Robotics.
Berry received bachelor's degrees in mathematics (1992) and electrical engineering (1993) through a dual degree program between Spelman College and Georgia Tech. At Georgia Tech she observed the scarcity of female and African-American students and faculty within the engineering program, which sparked her desire to become an engineering professor to encourage greater participation of underrepresented populations in the profession.[1] After graduation, she worked in industry to repay her student loans[2] while concurrently pursuing a masters degree at Wayne State University. She earned her masters in control systems from Wayne State University in 1996, and a year later left industry to pursue a doctoral degree at Vanderbilt University.[3] Berry was part of the Vanderbilt University Intelligent Robotics Laboratory (IRL), and was advised by Kazuhiko Kawamura and Julie Adams. Her doctoral thesis was on human-robot interface development for a mobile robot, specifically the enhancement of the interface through graphical visualization of the robot's short-term memory.[4]
Berry is a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, where her academic interests include educational mobile robotics, human-robot interaction, and recruiting and retention of underrepresented populations in engineering.[5] In 2008, Berry and her colleague Deborah Walter created the Rose Building Undergraduate Diversity (ROSE-BUD) program, which attracts talented female and underrepresented minority students in computer science and electrical, computer, and software engineering through scholarships and other program activities.[6] Berry also worked with a cross-department team of faculty at Rose-Hulman to establish a multidisciplinary robotics minor degree program,[7] for which she continues to serve as co-director. Berry has been a guest speaker at several Women in Engineering outreach events,[8] and she has written articles for the New York Times[9] and ASEE Prism magazine[2] on her experiences as a professor from an underrepresented group.
Berry has received several awards for her work increasing diversity in STEM fields, including the Women and Hi Tech Leading Light award[8] and the INSIGHT Into Diversity Inspiring Women in STEM award.[10] In 2020, Berry was named Indiana FIRST Game Changer,[11] One of 30 women in Robotics You need to Know about[12] and Reinvented Magazine Interview of the Year award on Purpose and Passion.[13] In 2021, Berry was named Dr. Lawrence J. Giacoletto Endowed Chair for Electrical and Computer Engineering.[14] She was also awarded the TechPoint Foundation for Youth Bridge Builder award as part of the TechPoint Mira awards.[15],[16],[17]
In June 2021, Berry was named Distinguished Fellow by the American Society for Engineering Education and IEEE Senior Fellow.[18][19][20][21][22][23] In 2022, she earned multiple accolades and awards including 2023 IEEE Undergraduate Teaching Award,[24] Society of Women Engineers 2022 Distinguished Engineering Educator Award,[25] 2022 Distinguished Educator Award from the American Society of Engineering Education Electrical and Computer Engineering Division,[26] and 2022 Open Source Hardware Trailblazer Fellow.[27] In 2023, Berry was awarded the Abie Educational Innovation Award by AnitaB.org at the Grace Hopper Celebration in Orlando, FL.[28]