“…5). The way Chavone's narrative is presented in her co-authored article does more to expose her tremendous vulnerability for the White gaze (Goitom, 2019;Yancy, 2008) than enhance the literature on Black women in America (Angelou, 1997;Berry & Gross, 2020;Hine, 1974;Truth, 1951), in higher education (Banks, 2009;Benjamin, 1997;Evans, 2008;Patton & Croom, 2017), or the growing scholarship on Black women in undergraduate engineering programs (Bush, 2013;Gibson & Espino, 2016;Stitt & Happel-Parkins, 2019). We can consider it widely known that Black women embody tremendous fortitude and social agility to get into, and through, engineering, and we can look across disciplines to observe research methodologies that are truly empowering for participants like participatory action research (Kemmis et al, 2013;McIntyre, 2007) or CRiT walking (Giles & Hughes, 2014), among others (Denzin et al, 2017;Ross, 2017;Solórzano & Yosso, 2002).…”