
Will continue to hold for over twenty years. Initially assuming the ad onlyĪpplies to white women, Dorothy’s life is forever changed with her applicationĪnd eventual acceptance to a job as a human “computer,” a mathematical job she The first figure highlighted, former math teacher Dorothy Vaughan, sees aīulletin in her local Post Office for mathematical jobs at a nearby airplaneĭevelopment facility at the height at WWII. These women’s individual stories in with scientific explanations, nationalĮvents, and descriptions of life for African-Americans in the segregated South. This solid example of kids’ historical non-fiction, Shetterly expertly weaves Struggles to break down both gender and racial barriers in the workplace throughout Langley Laboratories in Hampton, Virginia, the reader is exposed to their Through the compelling, true stories of four African-American women employed at


Her text into a highly engaging, 240 page version for a younger audience.

In Hidden Figures (Young Readers’ Edition), Shetterly deftly adapts Stories are told in Margot Lee Shetterly’s 2016 best-selling, adult non-fictionĪdapted into a hit movie by the same name. A time when African-American female mathematicians could typically only findĮmployment as teachers in the segregated schools of the South, there were someīrave women who took bold steps toward changing this path.
