STEM award recognizes Highline College faculty member

Dr. Amelia Phillips has been named one of this year's 100 Inspiring Women in STEM, an award presented by Insight Into Diversity magazine.

  • BY Wire Service
  • Thursday, September 17, 2015 2:49pm
  • News
Dr. Amelia Phillips

Dr. Amelia Phillips

For the Reporter

Dr. Amelia Phillips has been named one of this year’s 100 Inspiring Women in STEM, an award presented by Insight Into Diversity magazine.

A tenured faculty member at Highline College, Phillips earned the national recognition for her teaching, mentoring and leadership in the computer science field. STEM fields include science, technology, engineering and math.

“Dr. Phillips is everything a college could ask for in a STEM faculty member,” said Jeff Wagnitz, vice president for Highline’s Academic Affairs division. “She is an exceptional scholar, campus leader, industry liaison and role model for students. It’s an understatement to call her award ‘well deserved.'”

Phillips was one of only seven recipients from two-year colleges and one of four from the state of Washington. Most award winners represent four-year colleges and universities.

A recognized expert in the field of digital forensics, Phillips often speaks and serves as a panelist at conferences and events in the community and on campus.

“This award is being presented as a tribute to 100 women whose work and achievements not only encourage others in their individual STEM fields, but also inspire a new generation of young women to consider careers in science, technology, engineering and math,” said Lenore Pearlstein, publisher of Insight Into Diversity.

Phillips mentors female students on campus and has taken several to the annual Women in Cybersecurity Conference. In 2014, she took four students, and in 2015, she and five students presented a joint session with Brigham Young University. For Highline’s new Women in Cybersecurity club, she serves as the adviser.

Her many achievements include co-writing one of the leading computer forensics textbooks in the country and a textbook on e-discovery; serving as director of the Pacific Rim Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition; and designing certificate and AAS programs for community colleges in e-commerce, network security, digital forensics and data recovery. Phillips led Highline’s development of an applied baccalaureate in cybersecurity and forensics, one of the college’s first four-year degrees.

Phillips began teaching computer information systems courses in the late 1990s and has been an instructor at Highline College since 2002. She was chair of the college’s Pure and Applied Science division for six years.


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