Women and Gender eXpansive Coders hosts events like a beginners class about Python. Courtesy Mary Gibbs Back when Mary Gibbs decided to change her career track from neuroscience to data science, the ...
When Aparna Sai Nimmagadda looks around the discussion section in her Operating Systems course, the 21-year-old computer science senior sees only five women among her 30 classmates. At UF, that’s a ...
In April 2024, Women Who Code—arguably one of the most influential nonprofits focused on supporting and retaining women in technology—abruptly shut down due to a lack of sufficient funding. The ...
Communities of support are crucial for women in tech. Research from Logitech reveals that 90% of women working in computer science in the U.S. experienced isolation during their studies, careers, or ...
Mentorship, discussions of lived experience, programming that fosters a sense of belonging: these are all crucial aspects of workplace diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, according to ...
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Celebrating Black Women in STEM
Women Who Code celebrates the brilliance of Black women in STEM, from engineering to programming. Honoring trailblazers like Katherine Johnson and Dorothy Vaughan, they highlight their impact while ...
Women Who Code’s CEO and co-founder Alaina Percival discusses her work bringing more women into tech-related fields through hands-on technical training and networking opportunities.
A 2025 study finds that when women and men both use AI to produce identical work product, the women are viewed as less competent than the men. This reflects a broader pattern of gender bias that ...
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