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Katherine Johnson
Her amazing math skills helped launch American astronauts into space.
As You Read: List three ways that Johnson's love of math changed her life.
Can math change the course of history? The life and work of Katherine Johnson proves that it can!
For 33 years, Johnson was a mathematician at NASA. That’s our country’s space agency. She worked on some of history’s most important space missions.
Counting Stars
Johnson was born in West Virginia in 1918. Even as a little girl, she loved math.
“She counted everything: houses, stairs, dishes, the stars in the sky,” says Margot Lee Shetterly. She wrote a book called Hidden Figures. It’s about real Black female mathematicians at NASA.
A Love of Learning
Johnson was very smart! She skipped a few grades in school before graduating from college. In 1953, Johnson got a job as a “human computer.”
Computers at the time were very simple. So she and other female mathematicians solved math problems using mostly their powerful brains. Their work was used to design and fly planes and rockets.
But Johnson faced many challenges. Back then, segregation was legal. Johnson was kept separate from White women doing the same job. Plus, women were paid less than men.
Mega Missions
Still, Johnson rose to the top. In 1961, she worked on America’s first human spaceflight. A year later, she helped John Glenn become the first American to orbit, or go around, Earth.
But she was most proud of her work on the Apollo 11 mission. In 1969, she helped astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins travel to the moon and back.
A True Math Star
In 2016, a movie based on Hidden Figures came out. It was a hit! Suddenly, more people knew about Johnson and her work.
When Johnson died in 2020, she was 101. But her memory is still alive at NASA. To honor Johnson, the agency named two buildings after her.
Here are a few important moments in Johnson’s life.
1929: At just 10, Johnson starts high school. She graduates from college at 18. That’s the age when most people start college.
1953: Johnson starts work as A “human computer.” She uses pencils, simple adding machines, and smarts to solve hard problems.
2015: President Barack Obama awards Johnson the Presidential Medal of Freedom. That’s America’s highest civilian honor.