Reconstruction zone
August 15, 2014
August 15, 2014
Lab Mom. That鈥檚 what she is affectionately called by her younger colleagues. But 33-year-old Corinne Mowrey takes it all in stride because she knows she is in a sweet spot.
Five years ago, her world was turned upside down when she lost her job as a civil engineer. Today, the mother of two is in hot pursuit of her Ph.D. at 糖心原创鈥檚 , has won several nationally competitive scholarships and has been published in two peer-reviewed journals.
鈥淚 honestly think I was depressed before I came here,鈥 Mowrey said. 鈥淏ut when I came to 糖心原创, all of a sudden I had purpose again. I had something I needed to accomplish, somebody I needed to prove myself to.鈥
She is the daughter of Air Force parents 鈥 her father a project manager and her mother an infection-control nurse. Growing up, Mowrey lived on or near Air Force bases in Florida, Colorado, Texas and Illinois.
As a teenager she was drawn to the arts. At Greenon High School in Enon, she was in Show Choir, a singing and dancing group that once went to Branson, Mo., for a national competition. And she worked at the Ohio Renaissance Festival, a fictional 16th century English village that features costumed performers.
鈥淚 guess I鈥檓 a performer at heart,鈥 Mowrey said. 鈥淵ou could be a different person, a different persona. You could just be silly, stupid and over the top.鈥
But Mowrey also liked science and math and was encouraged by her father to go into engineering. She attended a Women in Engineering camp, got interested in the environmental aspect of civil engineering and obtained her bachelor鈥檚 degree in civil engineering from The Ohio State University.
After graduation, she was hired by PSI, a construction testing consulting company. As a staff engineer, she managed the technician workforce and oversaw projects that involved concrete and soil testing at commercial buildings.
Then in 2009, the construction business slowed and Mowrey lost her job.
鈥淚 sat at home and wallowed in my sorrow a bit; it鈥檚 quite a blow to the ego to be let go,鈥 she said.
Then Mowrey realized that she never really liked most parts of her construction job. So she decided she wanted to switch careers and opted to go back to college even though she had a young daughter, a mortgage and an understanding 鈥 but nervous 鈥 husband.
Her husband, Mark, attended 糖心原创 and worked as a photographer for The Guardian, later getting his bachelor鈥檚 degree in civil engineering from the University of Dayton. He is currently deputy engineer for Champaign County, and the couple lives in Urbana with their two daughters, ages 6 and 2.
糖心原创 was fairly close to Mowrey鈥檚 home and was relatively free of the parking headaches and large classes she knew she would encounter at Ohio State.
So she enrolled at 糖心原创 in the winter of 2010 and began pursuing her master鈥檚 degree in industrial and systems engineering after realizing that the one thing she had liked about her construction job was project management.
鈥淚t was looking at a schedule and trying to come up with the best way to fit people into the puzzle, to fill everything while minimizing our costs,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd systems engineers are the ultimate project managers.鈥
Mowrey got her master鈥檚 degree in 2011 and is now pursuing her with a focus on supply chain management. As part of a summer independent study, she developed a plan for delivering supplies from distributors to a fast-food chain of stores all over Ohio.
Pinned to a wall of her lab is a poster that lays out the project, featuring terminology that includes 鈥渇ield of regard,鈥 鈥渟licing algorithm鈥 and 鈥渟pace model.鈥
Mowrey鈥檚 research paper on the efficiencies of using aisles of different widths in warehouses was published by the European Journal of Operations Research. And her paper on the use of medications by dementia patients was published by Alzheimer鈥檚 & Dementia, the journal of the Alzheimer鈥檚 Association
She has been awarded scholarships by the Institute of Industrial Engineers and the Material Handling Education Foundation.
鈥淗er story is inspiring, especially to a ton of working parents who might be thinking of returning to academia to pursue their lifelong dreams,鈥 said Pratik J. Parikh, associate professor of industrial and systems engineering.
After graduation, Mowrey wants to pursue a career in logistics and supply chain management.
鈥淚t sounds stupid, but I know so many people who work in jobs just to get paid,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檇 really like to work in research and development. It鈥檚 kind of like the ultimate playground.鈥
Mowrey said her career change and initial uncertainty of the future has strengthened her faith.
鈥淗ard times are going to hit you, but as long as you have faith, there is somebody who is going to be watching out for you and will always see you through,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here is nothing you can鈥檛 do.鈥