A leader in robotics and engineering mentorship, Socarras has
served as head coach for FIRST Lego League teams, earning the President of the
United States Volunteer Service Award for her community contributions and
demonstrating a deep commitment to fostering STEM innovation. Her teams—The
Fellowship of the Brick, The Girls’ Army of Engineers, and Knights of the Old
Republic—garnered top statewide honors in Florida, including Outstanding
Technical and Team Performance, Robot Design, Robot Performance Score, Project
Presentation, and Teamwork, with a first-place tie in the 2010 State FLL
Competition.
Mayra's engineering foundation stems from her tenure as a
Senior Design Engineer at The Boeing Company from 1987 to 1999, in NASA’s Space
Shuttle Program. She received NASA's Return to Flight Group Achievement Award
for her electrical systems review following the Space Shuttle Challenger
accident, contributing to NASA’s STS-26 Return to Flight mission. She holds a
Master of Science in Industrial Electronics and Computers and a Bachelor of
Science in Electrical Engineering from the University of Miami.
When asked why she thinks manufacturing education is
important, Socarras states
The manufacturing sector is
currently facing a significant talent shortage. Due to retiring workers,
insufficient new qualified applicants, evolving skills requirements and lack of
visibility, millions of jobs could go unfulfilled. Education and training
programs directly help close this gap by preparing students to apply and
succeed in these roles. Manufacturing jobs often offer competitive
compensation, benefits and advancement opportunities. Therefore, manufacturing
education often serves as a bridge between poverty and the middle class. Modern
manufacturing relies on advanced processes like automation, robotics, data
analytics and smart factories, manufacturing education ensures workers from all
walks of life can implement and optimize these technologies rather than being
left behind. Due to outsourcing manufacturing to other countries, the United
States in the last few decades has become dependent on foreign suppliers which
has weakened our economy. Currently, the United States has changed its policies
in favor of bringing back manufacturing within our borders, in order to satisfy
trading partners, grow our GDP, create high-paying jobs, and help families
prosper. As a matter of national security, manufacturing education is
critically important. By investing in robust manufacturing education, the
United States can not only fill critical gaps but also secure a resilient, self-sufficient
economy that empowers workers and strengthens the middle class.
| Semiconductor Cleanroom |
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| Intro to Electronics |
Congratulations again to Mayra for her support of manufacturing education and career awareness! For more information on the FLATE Awards visit http://fl-ate.org/programs/flate-awards, or contact Ernie Friend, Executive Director of FLATE, at ernie.friend@flate.org.
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