East LA native, who was Jaime Escalante's student, playing integral part in Mars mission

The NASA JPL engineer graduated from Garfield High and attributes part of his success to his math teacher Jaime Escalante, who was the teacher in the '80s film "Stand and Deliver."

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ByEric Resendiz KABC logo
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
East LA native, who was Jaime Escalante's student, playing integral part in Mars mission
Sergio Valdez, an East Los Angeles native, leads a team of engineers in NASA's Perseverance rover.

EAST LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- On Thursday, NASA cheered for their biggest and most advanced rover when it landed on Mars, called Perseverance. Among those who helped lead the project was Sergio Valdez, who is from East Los Angeles.

"I feel very lucky to be part of a team like this...to be part of such a rich heritage that JPL is bringing," said Valdez. "But to have come from a community that...you rarely think that you can end up in a place like JPL."

Valdez is an engineering manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. His parents immigrated from Mexico; he grew up in East L.A. and graduated from Garfield High in 1991. One of his professors was the famous math teacher Mr. Jaime Escalante, who was the subject of the '80s movie "Stand and Deliver."

"What he taught me in high school was a huge step forward for me to make a career out of myself," said Valdez. "I didn't realize how much he had contributed to my education until I got to college."

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Valdez started at NASA JPL as an intern after graduating high school. He then started as a fulltime employee after he graduated from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo.

Fast forward to February 2021, he's leading a team of more than 100 engineers. They're in charge of the rover's scientific equipment that could answer whether life ever existed on the red planet.

"Granted, I only grew up about 12 miles from JPL and I had no idea it existed. So, to be able to show up there, and start to learn how to be an engineer, and start to work as a team member and start to make a lot of contributions that make these missions possible... that's just a huge leap forward," said Valdez. "And I feel proud to be one of those that could get there and be able to do what we're doing."

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Jose Hernandez, a California farmworker who went on to make history in NASA as the first first-generation Mexican American astronaut, says the latest mission to Mars has inspired him, stirring his love of space once again.

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