By RayJaun Stelly | The Seattle Medium | Word In Black

Graphic courtesy of Seattle Medium.
Graphic courtesy of Seattle Medium.

This post was originally published on Seattle Medium

(WIB) – The William Grose Center For Cultural Innovation has launched Black Girls Code, Unlocking Imagination With Code, a six-week coding program that will help girls learn how to create shapes, customize colors, animate, and invent through code that they can not only display on their charm but share with others.

The Black Girls Code program is designed for middle school-aged Black girls who are interested in learning to create their own personal โ€˜imagicharmsโ€™ using Python programming. The program is specifically designed to empower Black girls in technology and help promote diversity and inclusivity in the tech industry. Participants will be mentored by experienced instructors who are passionate about technology and education.

Itโ€™s wonderful to give the youth of this community an opportunity to gain a new skill set around people who look like you.JAVIN NASH-HARRIS, TECH ASSISTANT AT BLACK GIRLS CODE

โ€œItโ€™s wonderful to give the youth of this community an opportunity to gain a new skill set around people who look like you; this is a way to keep the community,โ€ said Tech Assistant Javin Nash-Harris. โ€œFor them to have this, theyโ€™ll look back and remember that they were a part of it, and itโ€™ll be way bigger. Iโ€™m excited for the program and to be a part of it.โ€

Tech Lead Aryn Davis says that learning how to code is an important skill for young people to learn.

โ€œWeโ€™re entering a technical world, so what does it mean for Black people to not be left behind? What does it look like to have more technical skills? As weโ€™re becoming more technical, itโ€™s almost like every industry needs somebody who can code,โ€ says Davis.

According to zippia.com, gender diversity in the tech industry is something that isnโ€™t widely discussed but commonly understood. Men hold 73.3% of all tech jobs, leaving women with a percentage of 26.7% of tech positions. Women who break into the competitive male-dominated tech world are continuously met with lower pay despite doing the same grade of work.

โ€œWhen we look at the percentages of Black people in technical roles, itโ€™s very little,โ€ says Davis. โ€œItโ€™s harder for girls to try something new because weโ€™re socialized to be good at whatever it is already. Thatโ€™s why weโ€™re encouraging them to try new things that will greatly help them throughout their career.โ€

โ€œWe have to have more spaces and programs for Black girls like this, and Black Girls Code can be the difference if they want a future in STEM or another path,โ€ said William Grose Center Program Coordinator Henry Igwala. โ€œBlack Girls Code can create a pipeline to form connections straight from this program to internships and on into the workforce.โ€

The diversity and wage gap is something that Nash-Harris believes can be bridged, especially when teaching young Black girls coding, especially in a state where Amazon, Google, and Microsoft reside.

โ€œItโ€™ll fill in the wage gap, and thatโ€™s important for young Black ladies to get paid properly what technology people are being paid, not just with pay but access to everything as well. Itโ€™s extremely important for them to know how to code, but we have to make it cool and normalized.โ€

โ€œI see us [Black women] in the next 10-20 years taking over,โ€ says Nash-Harris. โ€œIt goes back to representation in STEM; itโ€™s important I think for the Central District community. Itโ€™ll add to our history here. This program can have an enormous impact on this community, especially with Amazon, Google, and Starbucks here. Seattle itself is filled with a lot of startups.โ€

We have to have more spaces and programs for Black girls like this, and Black Girls Code can be the difference if they want a future in STEM or another path.ARYN DAVIS, TECH LEAD AT BLACK GIRLS CODE

โ€œThe program is great, impactful, and most importantly, itโ€™s fun. Itโ€™s like, why wouldnโ€™t you want to be a part of it? Learning code and being all technical is good to do, but it doesnโ€™t have to be boring or just like school,โ€ said Davis. โ€œWeโ€™re going to have fun; this is a place where you come and learn.โ€

What was once a fire station has now turned into a culturally innovative center for youth and the community, helping them connect with other participants and staff who look like them and come from the same walks of life. Black Girls Code will help change the perspective surrounding coding and what that means for Black people; therefore, it has a sense of normalcy going forward.

โ€œGrowing up here in the Central District, this space was a fire station. Itโ€™s getting rebuilt and renovated into a space for the community,โ€ stated Nash-Harris. โ€œTo be a part of a program like this, Iโ€™ve gotten to network. Itโ€™s a safe space for me as well as the youth.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s cool to see that you can leverage your own skills. Itโ€™s cool to know I can use the skills from my job that got me here and help form my sense of community,โ€ said Davis. โ€œI see this as pouring into my community, and I hope we can get some students and help start changing their lives as well.โ€

Black Girl Code is still accepting applicants. You can register online at https://www.williamgrose.org/events.

The post New Program Aims To Help Diversify The Tech Industry</strong> appeared first on The Seattle Medium.