From Blackboard to Blueprint

A Teacher’s Journey to Aerospace

Woman stands facing viewer smiling.

By Lauren Mittleman

In 2010, Assistant Department Manager Traci Elliott was working as a substitute teacher in Torrance, California, trying to figure out her next career move when she received a life-changing call from a friend at Northrop Grumman. Her friend encouraged Traci to apply for an administrative assistant position supporting the system used to track and purchase the company’s hardware and piece parts.

“I wanted to be inspired, excited and surrounded by talent,” said Traci. “My friend worked with engineers, business managers and technicians and sold me on how many different types of people worked at the company, so I said, ‘Yes, whatever it is, I’m in.’”

Traci’s professional pivot continued over the next several years. She became a lab facilitator in Electronic Assembly and Test and then a section manager for cryocooler manufacturing before joining her current group in the machining section of the Advanced Manufacturing and Machining Operations department (AMMO), which machines, plates and assembles flight parts for dozens of programs across Northrop Grumman’s Space Park site in Redondo Beach, California. Using the AMMO department’s machining equipment, talented apprentices, machinists and technicians create metal parts which must stay on-schedule and under-cost to serve customers’ critical missions.

Compassionate Company Culture

Traci had the opportunity to take on a new challenge as assistant department manager in 2022.

“Honestly, I wasn’t sure it was something I was ready to do, but I had some really great managers who knew my skills, valued my potential and told me, ‘You can do it. You are ready. Just go over there and try it out,’” Traci said.

As the first woman at her site to hold her position, Traci has firsthand appreciation for Northrop Grumman’s culture of belonging. Today, Traci uses her experience as a teacher to foster a positive work environment for her large and diverse team and places significant emphasis on the importance of creating a warm, inclusive culture.

“To me, a team is no different than a classroom of students,” said Traci. “As a teacher, you have to change your teaching or communication style based on the person — it's an everyday commitment to fostering the culture and making sure people feel like they want to be here.”

Life at Northrop Grumman

Your work at Northrop Grumman makes a difference. Whether you want to design next-generation aircraft, harness digital technologies or build spacecraft that will return humanity to the moon, you’ll contribute to technology that’s transforming the world. Check out our career opportunities to see how you can help define possible.

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