Pioneering New Pathways for Equity in STEM

By Meghan Franklin

Joan Ritzenthaler

Joan Ritzenthaler

Seattle-based Joan Ritzenthaler (DU ‘71) has lived all over the country, from Alaska to Minnesota to the East Coast. She even spent two years living in Hungary as a Peace Corps volunteer with her late husband.

“I have a bit of wanderlust,” she says, noting she has plans to go to South Africa later this year.

Still, for all the travel she does, Denver holds a special place in her heart.

Ritzenthaler’s family moved to Denver when her father, Clint Kelley, accepted a job at the University of Denver. He served as a beloved professor and the Chair of the Department of Chemistry until his retirement in 1971.

Being the child of a DU professor came with a steep financial benefit: Ritzenthaler says she got a 90% tuition discount. She says she knows how fortunate she was to get a DU education at a fraction of the cost that most students paid.

“I got to know good people, and I got to learn a lot,” she says of her time at DU.

Ritzenthaler keeps in touch with a group of DU friends from the Alpine Club, which was a meaningful part of her DU experience.

Like Ritzenthaler, Kelley was an outdoor enthusiast. In addition to teaching chemistry, he was a volunteer mountaineering instructor and an avid mountain climber. Sadly, he fell to his death in 1982 while climbing a mountain with friends in Washington.

Ritzenthaler’s personal experience and desire to honor her father’s DU legacy led her to bequest a generous gift to establish The Clint Kelley Endowed Scholarship Fund to provide financial support for undergraduate students who participate in DU’s Equity in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (E-STEM) program.

E-STEM’s mission is to nurture the strengths of incoming undergraduates from historically underrepresented backgrounds who elect to major in STEM subjects, helping them successfully transition to the college environment and navigate STEM paths at DU.

The Office of Financial Aid and the Director of E-STEM will select Clint Kelley Scholars based on demonstrated financial need and academic merit.

Although Ritzenthaler was a social sciences major, her score on a math aptitude test after college landed her a job as a systems engineer at IBM, where she had a long career.

“I wonder if DU had (the E-STEM program) when I was there, I would have done it,” she says.

“As society advances, I think it’s important for everyone, especially those who have faced challenges, to have the opportunity to focus on education,” Ritzenthaler says of her decision to support E-STEM.

“Attending DU is expensive, and many of our diverse E-STEM Scholars have multiple jobs to cover tuition, as well as the cost of labs and supplies. This scholarship will help defray the cost of attendance and allow E-STEM scholars more time to focus on their course work and professional development related to their STEM major,” Director of E-STEM Anthea Johnson Rooen says.

To explore the many ways you can join Joan Ritzenthaler in supporting DU students by establishing a scholarship, contact Jon Kraus at 303.871.4619 or jon.kraus@du.edu.