The girls are learning to create small programs, apps and video games. Members of the Girls Who Code club at Brookview Shelter in Dorchester, Massachusetts, are pictured here during a field trip to ...
Almost nine years ago, I became a dad, more specifically, a stay at home dad. The Sprog, as I refer to my offspring, is currently in Elementary school. I've been kind of at loose ends for reasons, and ...
Members of the Girls Who Code Club work on programming holiday light displays during an Oct. 12 meeting at NewBoCo in Cedar Rapids. The displays they’ve created will help light up shops and ...
DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Women represent close to 50 percent of the labor force in the United States, but they hold less than 25 percent of jobs in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and ...
A statewide network of museums and nature centers, among other things, is planning to launch a program aimed at helping girls learn about jobs in the technology and science industry. The clubs will be ...
Learning to code is no longer optional in today’s rapidly changing digital world, but many young people still don’t have access to the right resources. With underrepresentation in the tech industry, ...
Samantha Dahlby (right), NewBoCo’s director of K-12 education, works with student Fiona Burns in the Girls Who Code program in January 2020 at the Geonetric Building, 415 12th Ave. SE in Cedar Rapids.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results