Waleska Rivera Rios
From a threatened tree to environmental leadership

Waleska Rivera Rios shares her love for
science with students at Ysleta High School in El Paso,
Texas. She is an alumna of UCAR's SOARS program.
(Photo courtesy Waleska Rivera Rios.) |
One tree: that's what made Waleska Rivera Rios a scientist.
No, make that one tree plus one school bus driver.
At the age of 11, Rivera Rios was riding the school bus one
day in her then-hometown of Carolina, Puerto Rico, when the
bus driver took a detour past her own home. The driver casually
pointed at a neighbor's tree and told the children that she
was tired of sweeping its leaves out of her own front yard,
so she was trying to kill it by pouring bleach on its roots. "At
that moment, she became a witch to me," Rivera Rios recalls.
That was when she realized that she wanted to work to help
save the environment. "I have always kept that moment
in my heart."
The bleach-happy bus driver may have steered her toward environmental
science, but Rivera Rios had other reasons to incline toward
some kind of scientific career. Her mother is a nutritionist,
and Rivera Rios enjoyed learning about biochemistry from her.
Her father worked for Fisher Scientific and has always been
interested in science. She grew up reading Popular Mechanics.
Because of her science aptitude, her parents encouraged her
to apply to University Gardens High School in San Juan, Puerto
Rico, a prestigious public school with a science and math focus.
She passed the entrance test with flying colors and was admitted
in 1994, graduating in 1997.
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‘[SOARS]
taught me to do research by myself and not be intimidated
by those big words in journals.’
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Award-winning school days
Despite her aptitude for science, during high school, Rivera
Rios's plan for saving the environment was to become an environmental
lawyer. But when she learned that she would need a bachelor's
degree to get into law school, the obvious choice of major
was environmental science. "I didn't know much about it;
I thought it was solely about protecting the environment."
Rivera Rios was accepted at the University of Puerto Rico,
but her parents learned that a private school, Universidad
Metropolitana (a UCAR academic
affiliate), offered a full scholarship. She took computer
science and math classes at UMET in the summer before her freshman
year. "I really liked being at school there. I had the
chance to take courses that were going to count toward my degree,
and I didn't have to pay." Her undergrad years were funded
by a grant from NSF's Model
Institutions for Excellence program. But she's also proud
of winning another honor: first prize in a poetry contest at
UMET. Some of her poems are inspired by her love of science
and nature. Another prestigious award, the Gates Millennium
Scholarship, made it possible for her to enter graduate school
at the University of Texas at El Paso.
‘Education
ties up with the commitment I feel to nature and the
fact that I studied environmental sciences.’
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While at UMET, Rivera Rios applied for and was accepted into
UCAR's SOARS program
(Significant Opportunities in Atmospheric Research and Science).
Although she eventually made the decision to leave research
for teaching, Rivera-Rios still looks back on her SOARS experience
as "one of the most influential things to happen in my
life. I am deeply, deeply grateful to SOARS. It taught me to
do research by myself and not be intimidated by those big words
in journals, it taught me to work in a group and ask questions
when I need to, to communicate. I learned to write in English.
We produced wonderful things."
A natural choice
When she eventually decided to become a teacher, El Paso was
the natural choice of locale. "Ever since I left El Paso,
I wanted to come back. When I was working on my master's, I
fell in love with the desert. I have friends here, and I identify
with the Hispanic community. The personal relationships with
my students are very important to me, and I work in a school
where the majority of students are Hispanic."
She now sees her career in teaching as the natural outcome
of her life journey. "Education ties up with the commitment
I feel to nature and the fact that I studied environmental
sciences. Ever since I was doing the B.S. degree, I felt that
educating people was the best way to enrich awareness
toward the damage we do to the environment."
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