Girls in Tech
Girls in Tech (GIT) is a global non-profit focused on the engagement, education and empowerment of girls and women who are passionate about technology. Founded in 2007 to create a support framework to help women advance their careers in STEM fields, GIT aims to accelerate the growth of innovative women entering into the high-tech industry. With headquarters in San Francisco and more than 50 000 members located around the globe, GIT relies on volunteer efforts to lead each of the 60 local chapters. The core programming focuses on Empowerment, Engagement and Education through numerous activities including practical training and bootcamps, hackathons, Amplify: Women's pitch night, mentorship, Girls in Tech WORK and Girls in Tech Xchange.
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TECHNOLOchicas
TECHNOLOchicas is a collaborative project of the National Center for Women & IT (NCWIT) and Televisa Foundation designed to raise awareness among young Latinas in the United States (12-18) and their families to inspire them to consider a career in technology by presenting effective role models, broadening their perspective with site visits and empowering them with new technology skills. TECHNOLOchicas includes a national multimedia campaign that presents the stories of five young Latinas with successful technology careers. With over 3 000 public service announcements the campaign reached over 3 million Latina families in the US. The second component of the initiative includes after-school programmes in five US cities: Los Angeles, Palo Alto, New York, Boston and San Antonio.
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VHTO VHTO, The Dutch National Expert Organisation on Girls/Women and Science/Technology, has been building knowledge about the participation of girls and women in the world of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM), and has experience deploying this knowledge to increase the participation of women and girls in STEM education. VHTO contributes to breaking (implicit) stereotypes concerning gender and STEM, and to increase the self-confidence of girls and young women.
They use research-based interventions and develop them into a strong combination of activities for girls and women throughout the entire chain of education (from primary to higher and vocational education), training programmes for teachers and career advisers, and consultations with school and education managers.
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Laboratoria
Laboratoria is a tech social enterprise that empowers young women by giving them access to education and work in the digital sector. They recruit women with great talent but limited economic opportunities and take them through an immersive 5-month full-time programme focused on coding, front-end web development and personal development programmes. Upon graduation, they connect graduates with tech companies, where they begin transformational careers as web developers, significantly increasing their income and building a better future for themselves, their families and communities.
In less than 2 years, they have graduated over 200 coders in Peru, Mexico and Chile, with 70% of them starting a career in the tech sector within 3 months of graduation. Their average starting income represents a 3-fold increase compared to their earnings prior to Laboratoria.
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WAAW Foundation
Working to Advance STEM Education for African Women (WAAW) Foundation is an international non-profit organization founded in 2007. Headquartered in Lagos, Nigeria with an operational office in Texas, their mission is to increase the pipeline of African women entering into Science and Technology fields and to empower African women to become impactful leaders, change agents and technology innovators through STEM engagement.
Their programmes have impacted 21 000 secondary girls by college-to-secondary mentoring, they have awarded 31 College scholarships and they have trained 200 College fellows. WAAW operates 17 outreach and mentoring chapters in University campuses across 10 African countries including Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Togo, Kenya, Uganda, Malawi and South Africa.
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