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Showing posts from April, 2017

Girls, Gigabytes and Gadgets

Excited to participate on behalf of The Futures Fund in Senator Regina Barrow's 2nd Annual Girls, Gigabytes and Gadgets. This event combines discussion forums and hands on workshops to get young women and girls engaged in technology. More info. Join me at the Coding/App development workshop at the Louisiana Technology Park. The Hour of Code started as a one-hour introduction to computer science, designed to demystify "code", to show that anybody can learn the basics, and to broaden participation in the field of computer science. It has since become a worldwide effort to celebrate computer science, starting with 1-hour coding activities but expanding to all sorts of community efforts. =============================================================================== My Favorite Event Photos View Slideshow

College Student Creates A Mobile Directory Of 600 Books That Prioritize Diversity

Article As a kid, Kaya Thomas enjoyed reading. “No matter how old I was, what I was going through, how I felt in any moment, a book was always a means of escape” she  wrote in a blog post in 2015 . “A way to dive into a new world and become a new character.” As a self-professed “nerdy black girl in high school,” Thomas’ love of books, and the escapism they afforded, only grew. She’d read three or four a week, seeking solace in their pages when she “felt very different than most of my peers.” Something changed in those high school years, though. As a mature reader, she began to pay more attention to how the characters in her favorite books were described ― namely, how they were meant to look. “When I was a teenager I began to realize that a lot of the books I read didn’t have characters that looked like me,” she’s since admitted . “Realizing that made me feel invisible.” So as a student at Dartmouth College, Thomas decided to do something about her sense of invisibility. Not on