Tatler Hong Kong

See Jane Code

Education pioneer Jennifer Yu Cheng’s latest initiative empowers teenage girls to be futureread­y through STEM training and leadership developmen­t

- By Kate Appleton

How do we equip young people for the future? This question has motivated Jennifer Yu Cheng for more than a decade. In 2009, it helped inspire the launch of Arch Education, which prepares students for higher education abroad, and, in 2017, CTF Education, a leader in integrated learning.

Still, when Covid-19 hit, it was a wake-up call. She saw the pandemic roll back many gains that women had made in the workforce, while also accelerate the rate of digital transforma­tion that will make a tech education even more critical for everyone.

“The realisatio­n is that there’s this urgency to close the opportunit­y gaps, especially for women in STEM and women in leadership,” says Yu Cheng. “Being in schools, we know that the gender bias and stereotype­s still exist in Hong Kong and around Asia that deter teen girls from pursuing advanced maths and science subjects. My vision is to empower teen girls today—women leaders of tomorrow—to navigate these opportunit­ies of the future.”

To execute this vision and build a talent pipeline, Yu Cheng launched the Jennifer Yu Cheng Girls Impact Foundation (JYCGIF) in December 2020. Already it has partnered with an NGO to give scholarshi­ps to 100 girls in China’s Guizhou province, part of the foundation’s commitment to education access. In Hong Kong, its key programme is 10,000 Girls4girl­s Coding+, a trainthe-trainer model that encourages girls to learn coding and then teach that skill in their communitie­s.

Piloted this summer with students from Po Leung Kung schools, it will roll out to more local schools in 2022, eventually expanding throughout the Greater Bay Area and beyond. Yu Cheng, an engineerin­g graduate of Columbia University, gave the coding curriculum a try and appreciate­d that she had a head start on Python because she previously studied C++ and Java.

“Having a little bit of this digital literacy [means] that you’re able to continue to keep up with the pace of the demands of this fourth language,” says Yu Cheng. “Through

the means of learning coding, you actually learn a lot of 21st-century skills that allow for navigation into any career, any field.”

Yu Cheng cites mobilising others to collaborat­e as an important skill for future leaders, but she doesn’t want to just preach qualities; she wants to enable girls to be leaders. “In local schools, often one or two students are always the class rep or student council leader,” she says. “So being able to find opportunit­ies to experience a leadership role when you’re not typically identified as a leader at school, that’s a really empowering process.”

JYCGIF has hosted school talks with changemake­rs, from an AI professor to a female leader in finance, chosen based on input from the JYCGIF Youth Board of teens. It will be delivering inspiratio­n on a bigger scale with the inaugural JYCGIF Futuregen Girls Leadership Summit in 2022. “I’m really a believer in ‘seeing is believing’,” Yu Cheng says. “To bring in those inspiratio­nal women leaders encourages students to aim high and see what is possible.”

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