Person of the Week: Danica McKellar
Actress goes from "The Wonder Years" to inspire girls to excel in math.
Aug. 10, 2007 — -- At a time when so many young Hollywood stars are finding themselves in trouble with drugs, alcohol and the law, Danica McKellar is someone who escaped the perils of child stardom and now wants to present a different role model to young women.
"There is an epidemic right now of girls dumbing themselves down … in middle school because they think its makes them attractive," she said. "[It] could be because of the role models they are getting in the media."
She's trying to change that with a fun, sassy book about math to encourage middle school girls to recognize they can excel in both the classroom and their social life.
After this segment aired on "World News with Charles Gibson" McKellar answered viewer math questions in a Q+A here.
"Unfortunately girls think that being glamorous means making mistakes and being irresponsible. And that's just not true. The smarter you are, the better prepared you are to make decisions in your life, the more likely you are to lead a satisfying life and be glamorous and fun and anything you want to be," McKellar said.
The 32-year-old got her start in Hollywood 20 years ago as Winnie Cooper on TV's "The Wonder Years," and has since appeared on "The West Wing" and Lifetime's "Inspector Mom." And as she was racking up acting credits, she was also excelling in math.
In high school she aced her math SAT and AP calculus exam and took a chance on a math degree at UCLA after some initial trepidation.
"I didn't think that college math was for me. I didn't think I'd be able to hack it," McKellar said. "And that perception of math not being for girls, not being for girls who see themselves as socially well adjusted has got to change."
After graduating summa cum laude with a degree in math and a published physics theorem, McKellar realized she had something to offer off-screen.
She believes that girls get the message in middle school that "if you're really smart then you're not cool."
"When girls are asking themselves 'Who am I?' for the first time and they hear all this bad PR about math, they think, 'Well, whoever I am, I'm not somebody who likes math," said McKellar.