Counting on Katherine: How Katherine Johnson put Astronauts on the Moon
by Helaine Becker, illustrated by Dow Phmiruk
Interest age: 6 to 11
Reading age: 7+
Published by Macmillan Children’s Books, 2019
About this book
The young Katherine Johnson yearned to know as much as she could about numbers and the universe. At school she was a star student, skipping three grades because she was so bright. Yet the high school in Katherine’s town didn’t admit black students at the time, so her father worked extra hard to move the family to a town that did have a black high school.
Katherine did very well at high school and dreamed of being a research mathematician, but there weren’t any jobs for women in that area, so she became a school teacher. But, in the 1950s, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) started hiring women as mathematicians. Katherine was so good at her job that she was promoted again and again until she was selected to calculate the flight paths for Project Apollo, the first flights to the moon. Famously, when the Apollo 13 mission went awry, it was Katherine who had to re-calculate the astronauts’ path home, which she did successfully.
This inspiring picture book for 6 to 8 year olds will inspire them to dream big and work hard to acieve those dreams, whether they’re young mathematicians or not. Books like this also make maths fascinating, which can only be a good thing – and make us realise how essential numbers are in a variety of careers. Last, it’s Johnson’s sheer gumption and brains that are most inspiring of all.
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