Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsLaurie, 91, to continue inspiring women in science

Laurie, 91, to continue inspiring women in science

A retired Noosaville banker-turned-philanthropist is donating a six-figure endowment to extend her annual USC scholarship that encourages regional and rural women to study science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) degrees.

Laurie Cowled is also donating the proceeds of a new biography on her extraordinary life to the USC Laurie Cowled Regional Scholarship, which provides a high-achieving regional student in financial need with $5,000 each year for a three or four-year degree.

“I turned 91 the other day and this makes me feel astonishingly young and vibrant,” Ms Cowled said, who grew up on a farm outside Bethungra in New South Wales and first moved to the Sunshine Coast with her husband in 1984.

“I get such a kick out of meeting and supporting these wonderful young women. They’re so enthusiastic and skilled in areas once thought to be male provinces. They make me feel that Australia has a great future.”

Ms Cowled said she enjoyed staying in contact with students as they pursued their goals. One was Sally Watson, who graduated with her USC Bachelor of Paramedic Science in 2018 and went straight into a coveted job with the Queensland Ambulance Service (QAS).

The 24-year-old former Maroochydore student now lives and works in Bundaberg.

“We like to keep in contact, send each other emails and postcards,” Ms Watson said, who grew up at Charters Towers and enrolled at USC Sunshine Coast after a post-high school gap year.

“It was daunting at first, moving from a smaller area and leaving behind family,” she said. “But when I received the scholarship, I could focus on studying without stressing financially.

“It was easier to purchase things like textbooks and a stethoscope, as well as cover some costs when I completed three on-road practicums in Townsville, Caboolture and Vanuatu.”

Ms Watson is now a qualified advanced care paramedic with QAS Bundaberg.

“It’s so rewarding because the job is different every day,” she said. “We get to meet some amazing people and help them when they’re having their worst days. It’s special.

“We weren’t as busy as expected during the COVID-19 lockdown – most people seemed to be doing the right thing. I’ve met a lot of isolated, elderly people and I love talking to them.

“We take full precautions for any patients with respiratory issues. We wear gowns, masks and gloves and take them to a special area of the hospital.”

Ms Cowled, whose career was in banking, said she started making significant donations to institutions such as universities, the Australian Ballet School and NIDA in 2005 after her husband died.

“We’d always said the last one would leave money to charity and I was the last one. My passion was education and I wanted to do things for country girls,” she said.

Since 2011, she has funded course prizes and student support bursaries at USC as well as her annual scholarship.

“I now want to set up this endowment fund so the scholarship can hopefully go on forever,” she said. “I hope other people see the terrific pleasure you can get out of giving even a small amount, particularly if you’re interested in educating the next generation.”

Ms Cowled was a nominee for 2017 Queensland Senior Australian of the Year and received the 2010 Premier’s Award for Queensland Seniors.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Will the Euros rule Pipe?

By the time you read this, we may already have a start in the first WSL Challenger Series events for the year, the Lexus...

Lions Club delivers

Car warning

More News

Lions Club delivers

Members of the Tewantin Noosa Lions Club rolled up their sleeves and delivered a huge day for the community at the Noosa Australia Day...

Car warning

RACQ has issued a stark warning to Noosa motorists to never leave children or pets unattended in vehicles, after responding to more than 2,200...

Your feel-good escape at City Cave Noosa

Life on the Sunshine Coast might look cruisy from the outside, but between work, family, training and the general chaos of modern life, most...

Netting crisis fixed

A major breakthrough has been reached in the flying fox netting incident at Noosa Golf Club, with wildlife experts, the club and netting contractors...

Man taken to hospital

A man has been transported to Nambour Hospital in a stable condition following a multi-vehicle traffic crash at Doonan on Thursday morning. Queensland Ambulance Service...

Changes to community grants

Community organisations across Noosa Shire are being encouraged to apply for the latest council grant funding round, which opens on Monday, February 9, 2026. The...

Flying Fox update

Noosa Golf Club is today meeting with Flying Fox experts and netting companies to come up with a solution to the issue of bats...

Focus on the Olympics

One of the key delivery partners behind the Paris 2024 Olympic Games has shared insights with Sunshine Coast business and community leaders on how...

Community update

From singing and bush care to service clubs and art, there is a wide variety of groups in Noosa. ROVING RESTORERS Join the Roving Restorers Noosa...