A 16-member delegation of senior women
technology executives and professionals from Silicon Valley,
California are visiting Nigeria from March 18-23 as part of the
TechWomen program.
They represent organizations as diverse
as Twitter, LinkedIn, Netflix, Mozilla, Autodesk, WomenCollegeTech,
Stanford Graduate School of Business, Juniper Networks, as well as
Fairrer Samani Group, Northgate Environmental Management, Jessica
Dickinson Goodman Consulting, and the Institute of International
Education.
Members of the delegation include Ms.
Larissa Shapiro, Head of Mozilla’s Global Diversity and Inclusion
Division, and Twitter’s Senior Software Engineer, Ms. Elizabeth
Deng. Ms. Deng, a computer science graduate of the University of
Southern California co-organized “Girls Who Code Summer Immersion
Program” for the micro-blogging website in 2017.
Dr. Leedjia Svec, Director
WomenCollegeTech and former Director of Programs at the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Ames Research Center in
Silicon Valley, alongside Ms. Maile Smith, Principal Geologist/ Chief
Operating Officer at Northgate Environmental Management, are part of
the travelling delegation.
The delegation is working with Nigerian
Fellows of the TechWomen program to carry out mentoring sessions in
Lagos and Abuja for young women working in the areas of science,
technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).
During the week-long program, the
delegation will visit non-governmental organizations, private and
public enterprises, universities, schools, tech incubators and
innovation hubs to expand networks of women in STEM teaching and
learning in Nigeria.
Launched in 2011, TechWomen is an
initiative of the Department of State, which supports the U.S.
government’s global commitment to advance the participation of
women and girls around the world in the business and technology
sectors.
In addition to sending delegations of
American women technology mentors abroad, the TechWomen exchange
program brings young women leaders from the Middle East, Central
Asia, North Africa, and sub-Saharan Africa including Nigeria to the
United States for a professional mentorship at leading technology
companies.
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