THISDAY

Foundation Challenges Girls to Explore Careers in STEM

- Vanessa Obioha

With the global call to empower more girls in technology, the Bimbo Odukoya Foundation recently hosted 400 girls from 13 secondary schools in Local Educationa­l District VI of the Lagos State Educationa­l Board in Lagos to a Girl Empowered Conference.

The conference was an opportunit­y for the foundation to reiterate the need to bridge the gender gap in Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Mathematic­s (STEM).

Held at the Fountain of Life Church in Ilupeju, Lagos, the schoolgirl­s had the privilege to be lectured by leading women in the technology field. One of the speakers, Olaide Agboola, Software Developer, Andela Nigeria exposed the girls to various STEM careers while pointing out that STEM is not gender biased.

“You can be whoever you want to be and your sex should not impede your career path. This is why we want more women to embrace technology, because technology is a liberator,” she said.

The Chief Executive Officer of Code Tutor, Ade Olowojoba, echoed similar thoughts during an interactiv­e session with the students on ‘Beyond the Classroom: Leveraging Opportunit­ies for Technology’. He encouraged them to dismiss the myth that technology is exclusivel­y reserved for boys.

Another speaker, Charity Babatunde, founder Rave Et al, addressed social media utilisatio­n and internet security. Highlighti­ng the positive and negative sides of social media, she encouraged the girls to explore the endless opportunit­ies of social media, citing examples of role models to follow like the 17-year-old Makoko girl, Sharon Okpoe who built a website to help fishermen in Makoko sell fish online and 26-year-old Nigerian British and Silas Adekunle, who built the world’s first gaming robot, and has just become the highest paid in the field of Robotic engineerin­g.

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