If you’ve ever wondered whether your background would keep you from working for the FBI, then you may not have heard about Joanne Pierce Misko. She’s famous for being one of the first female FBI agents, but before her crime-fighting life began, she worked as a nun. Yes, a real-life nun, living in a convent and everything.
From these unlikely beginnings, Misko successfully completed training at the FBI Academy, despite having to meet the same physical fitness requirements as men. She went on to have a long career as an FBI Agent.
How much do you know about Misko’s life and FBI career? Take our quiz to find out!
How long did Misko work as a nun prior to joining the FBI?
- 3 years
- 7 years
- 10 years
- 14 years
What did Misko say was the most challenging part of her FBI Academy training at Quantico?
- Firearms training
- Being one of the only two women present
- Physical requirements
- Unacceptance from male peers
Which of the following situations happened to Misko during her career with the FBI?
- Being mistaken for a secretary rather than an FBI Agent
- Suspects becoming angry that a woman was being sent after them
- Being mistaken for the spouse of a fellow FBI Agent during investigations
- All of the above
Misko left her career with the FBI because
- She believed gender discrimination kept her from promotion
- She wanted to begin a new, different career
- She found the FBI Agent position too demanding as she got older
What career did Misko begin after her retirement from the FBI?
- Audit investigator at a bank
- Substitute teacher
- Bondswoman
How long did Misko work as a nun prior to joining the FBI?
- 3 years
- 7 years
- 10 years
- 14 years
What did Misko say was the most challenging part of her FBI Academy training at Quantico?
- Firearms training
- Being one of the only two women present
- Physical requirements
- Unacceptance from male peers
Which of the following situations happened to Misko during her career with the FBI?
- Being mistaken for a secretary rather than an FBI Agent
- Suspects becoming angry that a woman was being sent after them
- Being mistaken for the spouse of a fellow FBI Agent during investigations
- All of the above
Misko left her career with the FBI because
- She believed gender discrimination kept her from promotion
- She wanted to begin a new, different career
- She found the FBI Agent position too demanding as she got older
What career did Misko begin after her retirement from the FBI?
- Audit investigator at a bank
- Substitute teacher
- Bondswoman
Misko spent a decade working as a teacher and nun at a New York convent. One fateful encounter with an FBI Agent who came to the school to do recruiting led Misko to apply for a job with the FBI. But she couldn’t be an agent at that time, because FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover had strictly prohibited women from that type of job. Instead, Misko became a researcher.
Shortly after Hoover’s death, the policy that had been in place for nearly 50 years came to an end, and women were again allowed to join the ranks of FBI Agents. The head of Misko’s training division saw her hard work and potential and asked her if she’d like to become an FBI agent. Misko jumped at the chance.
She went on to serve as an FBI Agent for over two decades. Today, nearly 3,000 women serve as FBI Special Agents across the United States.