[DIYbio] Fwd: [bases-opportunities] Fwd: Girls Who Code Summer Employment



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ayna Agarwal <ayna.agarwal@stanford.edu>
Date: Sun, Feb 3, 2013 at 8:10 PM
Subject: [bases-opportunities] Fwd: Girls Who Code Summer Employment
To: bases-spam@lists.stanford.edu


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ashley Gavin <ashley@girlswhocode.com>
Date: Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 12:04 PM
Subject: Girls Who Code Summer Employment
To: ayna.agarwal@gmail.com, Kristen Titus <kristen.titus@gmail.com>


Hey Ayna,
My name is Ashley Gavin and I am trying to find enthusiastic cs
teachers for our summer immersion program at Girls Who Code. Kristen
Titus told me about you and She++. It seems like a great place to
recruit from. I've attached a job description and brief email that you
can forward around to your group and any other interested groups (cs
major etc.). Hope you are well!
--Ashley

Girls Who Code is on the hunt for smart, inspiring and talented
computer science instructors for its 2013 Summer Immersion Programs.
If you're passionate about computer science education and want to
change lives, we want you.

With support from Twitter, Google, GE, eBay and AT&T, Girls Who Code
programs work to educate, inspire and equip high school girls with the
skills and resources to pursue opportunities in technology and
engineering. GWC will launch programs in New York, Detroit, San
Francisco, and San Jose this summer—each on the campuses of these
companies. Throughout the 8-week program, you'll work with the GWC
team to provide instruction in robotics, web design and mobile
development paired with high-touch mentorship from the industry's top
engineers and entrepreneurs.

Our inaugural programs proved transformative for each of the young
women in the classroom: at 15, Julia now has two web design clients,
Nikita was offered an internship at a startup this summer, and Lesley
taught a course at her school and will enter college this fall, where
she's planning to study to become a computer science teacher.

Please see the description below for more information, and get in touch!

Look forward to hearing from you!

--
Ayna Agarwal
B.S. Symbolic Systems | Minor Human Biology
Stanford University | Class of 2014
(c) 732.642.4371

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