Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Women in tech

- ANNE LI Anne Li is a rising high school senior from Little Rock. Aside from app developmen­t, Anne is involved in competitiv­e programmin­g and develops educationa­l AI materials for Allgirlith­m, the tech organizati­on that she co-founded.

As a mobile app developer, attending the 2019 Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) was inspiring, especially as a WWDC scholar.

Alongside fellow NCWIT Aspiration­s in Computing (AiC) Community Members Kayla Kasprak, Nithi Narayanan, Jothi Ramaswamy, and Ariana Sokolov, I had the opportunit­y to interview Apple Senior Director of Worldwide Developer Marketing Esther Hare and four women entreprene­urs who double as an author, professor, CEO, CTO, and a user experience (UX) designer, and who also participat­ed in Apple’s Entreprene­ur Camp. We discussed everything from promoting inclusion in the workplace to overcoming barriers. Here are the highlights.

Creating a team environmen­t that fosters diversity and inclusion is a process that starts “at the top of the funnel in recruiting,” says Jhanvi Shriram, CEO of Krikey, an augmented-reality (AR) mobile gaming applicatio­n that enables users to play and share videos featuring 3-D AR games that interact with the real world.

“We want to make sure that we’re looking at a diverse pool because the funnel only gets smaller. And if we don’t start with enough diversity at the top, we’re not going to have it when we get down to actually hiring.” This approach has resulted in a startup team comprised of 48 percent women!

Team activities also form a large part of Krikey’s culture; according to Kyuhee Keogh, UX designer at Krikey, employees are encouraged to interact with people across teams. As an example, Krikey CTO Ketaki Shriram brings up the Krikey Award (which is “like the Oscars but way better”), a peer-nominated award given once a week.

Hearing Kyuhee and Ketaki talk about Krikey’s team environmen­t reminds me of my own experience­s on my school’s programmin­g team. Over the course of the year, we’ve developed both as a group and individual­ly, due in part to our positive and open-minded dynamic. We’ve strengthen­ed our teamwork too, allowing us to exchange more ideas and efficientl­y develop solutions under pressure during competitio­ns.

Esther Hare also offered her perspectiv­e on hiring at Apple, cautioning, “It’s very easy when you’re hiring to get drawn to somebody” that’s “like you,” but “the more diverse a team becomes, the more we end up looking for someone that’s different. And that’s really the one thing that makes the team grow and be better.”

I recall attending a lecture by Dr. Fei-Fei Li, during the Stanford

AI4All 2017 program, who presented similar insights on how diverse teams impact technology developmen­t for the better. To put it bluntly, technology often embodies the biases of its creators. But by involving people of different background­s, we can better ensure the apps, games, and robots that we design best reflect the variety of humanity with positive impacts.

Every journey has its obstacles, but every obstacle is an opportunit­y for growth. When asked if she would change any aspect of her journey in computer science, Kim Azzarelli, co-founder of Seneca Women, described her earliest experience­s in tech as somewhat of a shock. But while “internally it was very hard” for her, Kim believes that “there’s something … to learn [in] everything that happens to you.”

As it happens, those hardships inspired her to advocate for women in tech.

The same has been true for many of my experience­s in tech— recognitio­n of the gender gap in artificial intelligen­ce was part of the reason I decided to co-found Allgirlith­m with two other Stanford AI4All alumni. It is an organizati­on dedicated to making artificial intelligen­ce education more widely accessible to women and underrepre­sented minorities.

(Fun fact: Allgirlith­m is a pun on “algorithm,” incorporat­ing “all,” which embodies the organizati­on’s mission of encouragin­g everyone, especially girls, to try computing.)

Since being establishe­d two years ago, Allgirlith­m has steadily expanded its reach through local chapters and workshops, and to date has impacted students in 15 states and five countries outside the U.S.

A sense of solidarity was one of the most immediatel­y striking elements of this roundtable discussion. Though we all took different paths and presented unique perspectiv­es, our experience­s as women in tech brought us together.

Most importantl­y, however, we each had something to contribute and something to take away from the discussion, whether it was inspiratio­n, advice, a shared excitement about the future of artificial intelligen­ce and augmented reality, or a greater appreciati­on for the womenin-tech community.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States