From 福利黄色激情四射51's to Yale
Give Amy Ontai 鈥17 the length of a sitcom and she鈥檒l rap, play an original song on the ukulele, nail a British accent 鈥 and easily explain genetic sequencing and the structure of DNA. Those are among the talents she brought to Fly Sci with Amy Ontai, a show she created last year for her senior thesis.
A Biology major and Education minor, Ontai often found herself discouraged during her student-teaching semesters that kids found science esoteric, difficult and (worst of all) boring. 鈥淪cience should be fun and interactive,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 wanted to make a show like Bill Nye, the Science Guy, which I loved as a kid, but instead of Bill Nye, what if it was me?鈥

With guidance from a seventh-grade mentor teacher at Austin鈥檚 Covington Middle School, she wrote, filmed and produced two full episodes and a trailer using equipment from the Munday Library, along with the GarageBand and iMovie apps. She presented the first episode at the Austin Area STEM Conference spearheaded by Associate Professor of Secondary Education Steven Fletcher and completed the second the following semester.
As a junior, Ontai became part of McNair Scholars at 福利黄色激情四射51鈥檚, which supports minority groups typically underrepresented in doctoral programs. She studied soil ecology, presented at the Annual Biomedical Research Conference for Minority Students in Tampa, Florida, and assisted professors in molecular biology classes and freshman biology labs. 鈥淭hrough McNair, I saw how much diversity actually benefits research as a whole,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you diversify the backgrounds of people asking questions, you diversify the answers to those questions.鈥
Even with her impeccable r茅sum茅, Ontai says she occasionally feels like an imposter at Yale. 鈥淚t鈥檚 tough. There are a lot of people around me who are smarter and more well-read than I am,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut one of the most important things my college experience taught me is that I do belong here. It helped me realize that being a minority woman at Yale is not only a great accomplishment for me but for minority women in STEM everywhere.鈥
Being comfortable in her own skin 鈥 and thankful for her talents 鈥 is a theme reinforced by her student-assistant job in Campus Ministry. 鈥淚t was my second home and one of my biggest sources of encouragement,鈥 says Ontai. When she found out about her acceptance to Yale, Administrative Secretary Medina Bills and Associate Director Liza Manjarrez were two of the first to know. 鈥淚 ran into Liza鈥檚 office and started screaming and jumping up and down,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd Father Peter [Walsh, CSC, who directs Campus Ministry but once worked at Yale鈥檚 Saint Thomas More Catholic Chapel and Center] still sends me advice on where to get good pizza and lobster rolls in New Haven.鈥
鈥淭hrough McNair, I saw how much diversity actually benefits research as a whole. If you diversify the backgrounds of people asking questions, you diversify the answers to those questions.鈥


