Jan. 30, 2009 I met Lynn Langit of Microsoft DigiGirlz last year at my first 'She’s Geeky' and saw her determined passion and creative desire to offer 13-19 year old girls exposure to technical career opportunities firsthand. So THIS year at She's Geeky Lynn and I sat together at lunch and yakked in nanosecond updates trying to cram in all that’s going on with both of our … [Read more...]
DigiGirlz: Teen Girls Build Community, Online and Off (Part Three)
Filed Under: Advertising, Branding & Consumerism, Emerging trends & STEM, Interactive Games, Marketing Shaping Youth, Media Literacy, People Shaping Youth, Positive Picks, Pro-Social & Positive Picks, Product Placement, Shaping Youth, Stereotypes & Diversity Tagged With: Boku, CES, Crayon Physics, Daniel Brusilovsky, Destructoid, DigiGirlz, elearners, enviro, Fem2.0, geek, Girl Effect, girl geeks, girl revolution, girls, Girls Build, high tech camps, IT, Joystiq, Kaliya Hamlin, KODU, KoduClub, ld online, Lego Mindstorms, Logan Olson, Lynn Langit, Microsoft Digigirlz, MIT Media Lab, mobile phones and movies, Nancy-Gruver, New-Moon-Girl-Media, online communities, serious play, She's geeky, Shes Geeky 2009, ShesGeeky, Smart Girls Rock, smart karaoke, SongSmith, STEM, STEM programs for girls, tech, techno tools, teen girls, teens in tech, The Girl Effect, women, women and technology, Women Build, workplace, Xbox
Techno-Leaders Converge at She’s Geeky Jan. 30-31, 2009!
Jan. 27, 2009 Albert Einstein said,“It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity.” At She’s Geeky last year, I met women who can give that hope for humanity back, and they have the technological chops to do it. As I wrote about the UNconference before AND after She's Geeky last year, I was duly impressed by the exciting presence of so many … [Read more...]
Filed Under: Branding & Consumerism, Emerging trends & STEM, Interactive Games, Marketing Shaping Youth, Media Literacy, People Shaping Youth, Positive Picks, Pro-Social & Positive Picks, Sexualization & Body Image, Shaping Youth, Stereotypes & Diversity Tagged With: Anita Borg Institute, Beth-Kanter, computer history museum, Daughters, debunking misogynistic media, DevChix, digital sistas, education, engineering, Fast Company, Fem2.0, female scientists, girls, identity woman, influential women in tech, innovation, Kaliya Hamlin, LinuxChix, math, Planetwork, preteen girls, Science, She's geeky, She's geeky discount, Shes Geeky 2009, startups, technology, Teens in Tech conference, women, Women2.0