Dayton Daily News

Wright State student ‘a role model’ to Black kids

- By Makenzie Hoeferlin

There are two words that describe Mia Burnett — driven and passionate.

The Wright State student already has three master degrees in the sciences and is now pursuing her PhD in environmen­tal science. She’s just one of 65 Black females enrolled in STEM-related doctoral programs at Wright State, according to Wright State’s assistant director of public relations Jim Hannah.

“She is a role model to any African-American child, especially considerin­g girls, who are not that high in percentage­s in the scientific world, pursuing PhDs,” said Sumudu Rajakaruna, Burnett’s student mentor.

In addition to her passion for education, she’s passionate about teaching her children the Black history lessons she learned while growing up.

Teaching is something that comes naturally to Burnett, with a son in graduate school, another daughter in college at Ohio State and a 14-year-old still in the house. She finds herself teaching her children the importance of Black history, a curriculum she believes schools don’t adequately teach today.

“Eleven months out of the year, we normally don’t study Black history,” Burnett said. “It just gets shoved under the rug. We learn about Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, that’s it.”

Burnett’s mother attended an all-black middle school in the late 1950s just after

the time the U.S. started to desegregat­e classrooms. Burnett learned a great deal of her history from stories that her mother would tell her growing up.

“So my grandmothe­r had to decide whether to send her to a public school, where she could be beaten, she could be shot, where anything could happen,” Burnett

said.

Burnett’s mother ended up at Charleston Catholic High School in Charleston, W.Va., where her mother (Burnett’s grandmothe­r) felt that she would be safe, according to Burnett.

Now as a mother to children of her own, she takes it upon herself to make sure she teaches her children the importance of their ancestors and their contributi­ons to society.

So Burnett makes sure her children understand what their ancestors went through just to get an education. She also teaches them about the contributi­ons Black Americans have made to society.

Recently, because of the Black Lives Matter movement, Burnett’s 14-year-old daughter, Lydia, has been asking more questions about her history and the racial tensions between African Americans and police officers.

Having conversati­ons with her children like these are important to Burnett, especially more often than just one month of the entire year.

Burnett prays her lessons will help her children be successful and stay safe.

“My major concern is my son. I do not want anybody doing harm to him when he doesn’t deserve it. He’s a very calm, even-tempered young man,” Burnett said. “I just worry that he might be in the wrong place at the wrong time, and then there’s no more son.”

Aside from having their mother as a role model, she’s proud her children, especially her daughter Lydia, now have other African Americans, especially women, to look up to.

“Kamala Harris, I think she, and Michelle Obama have put African American females on the map. Because, before, what were we? We’re homemakers. We’re very strong. We’re very good parents. That’s all we get credit for. But now we have a first lady, we have a vice president, and I think that is very important,” Burnett said.

Amidst raising kids and attending college, Burnett also finds time to volunteer once a month at Cross Over Community Developmen­t in Dayton, a nonprofit supporting immigrants and refugees.

“I think if more people helped each other, the world would be better,” Burnett said. “All I can do is try to make a difference.”

 ??  ?? Mia Burnett
Mia Burnett

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