Name: Penny McKenzie; Institution: Columbia Basin College; Program: DOE's Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internship (SULI); Education Level: Undergraduate Student
October 26, 2020Internships are an avenue for Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) staff to share their knowledge and passion for their work, according to Penny McKenzie, a cybersecurity engineer at the lab who discovered her passion for computer science and cybersecurity through a series of internships as a student in her 30s at Columbia Basin College, a community college in Pasco.
![Headshot of Penny McKenzie](/sites/default/files/styles/full_article_width/public/2023-03/Web%20Size-McKenzie%2C%20Penny.jpg?itok=GHduOjjB)
McKenzie spent her early career working in customer service jobs as she raised her daughter. When her daughter reached high school, McKenzie applied for and was accepted into a worker retraining program that led to a computer science class at Columbia Basin College.
“I was like, ‘Wow, this is really crazy. I really love this. I know I can do this,’” she recalled.
Her interest led to an internship at Idaho National Laboratory (INL) in Idaho Falls, Idaho. A mentor there encouraged her to apply for a bachelor’s degree in cybersecurity at Columbia Basin College (CBC).
“Again, I found that I absolutely loved it. I was really good at it and it was just crazy in my mind that I was good at something different than customer service,” McKenzie said.
Because of the knowledge that I learned for the whole year and a half of my internship at PNNL, I got hired right away.
She applied for another internship through the Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internship (SULI) program and was accepted for a cybersecurity internship at INL. The following year, she applied for another SULI and found a placement doing industrial control systems cybersecurity at PNNL, which is closer to her family and home.
The PNNL internship spurred McKenzie to do a capstone research project at CBC on industrial control systems cybersecurity, a project that she presented during her interview for a full-time job with PNNL.
“Because of the knowledge that I learned for the whole year and a half of my internship at PNNL, I got hired right away,” she said. “I would never have done anything differently because, I think, all those experiences really set me up for the success that I have now.”
Today, McKenzie is passing on the knowledge she’s gained through ongoing outreach to cybersecurity students at CBC as well as participating as a mentor teacher in area high schools, teaching summer camps at the lab and hosting interns of her own.