Homerward Bound, highlighting female visibility
The three-week expedition offers a chance to finally meet in person, to share experiences, and to gain insights from the trainers who join them annually, covering topics like coaching, leadership, gender issues, and climate change.
For Hilde, who submitted her application via a two-minute video in 2019, the goal was to further her efforts in mentoring women, a role she had embraced at the University of León as head of the Department of Engineering, Mechanical, Computer Science, and Aerospace. "When I'm teaching, I look at the students I have in the classroom [...] and you never reach 20% women. And the truth is that this percentage decreases as we go up the ladder," she observes.
Despite her proven capabilities as a professor, Hilde felt that the Antarctic adventure helped bridge certain gaps: "You acquire a series of skills in communication, in visibility, which is what was most difficult for me [...]. It is not the same to communicate to fifty or a hundred students in the classroom as it is to address an audience through the lens of four cameras," she remarks, concluding, "That visibility that exposes your vulnerabilities is a challenge for us [as women], so we receive specific preparation to navigate it."