Young women from Fez or anywhere in Morocco who are keen on making a career in the rapidly expanding area of new technology now have the chance to improve their skills in the United States.
On Wednesday, US Secretary of State, Hilary Clinton launched TechGirls, an educational program for girls from Muslim countries with an interest in technology.
“It will bring teenage girls from the Middle East and North Africa for an intensive month of educational activities here in the United States,” Mrs Clinton said, as quoted by UPI.
She made the announcement at the closing luncheon honoring the first class of participants from TechWomen, a public-private partnership that brought emerging female leaders in technical fields from predominately Muslim countries to the U.S. for one-month.
The women were paired with 24 leading, American-based technology companies in Silicon Valley and the greater San Francisco area, including giants Google, Facebook and Intel, for a project-based professional mentoring
“Being a woman in the field of technology is not always easy. Being a woman in any field is not always easy, but there are so many opportunities in technology that we just have to forge ahead,” Clinton told the group of 37 Muslim women and their American mentors.
The participants came from Algeria, Egypt, Lebanon, Morocco, Jordan and the Palestinian Territories. TechWomen will expand next year to include Tunisia and Yemen. Select U.S. mentors will complete the professional exchange program and travel to Lebanon and Morocco later this year to conduct workshops for women in the technology sector as well as for young girls who have expressed an interest in tech-based careers.
TechWomen, a State Department initiative, was first announced by Clinton at the Presidential Summit on Entrepreneurship last spring. The U.S. Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs awarded a $1 million grant to the Institute of International Education. The IIE, in partnership with the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology, implemented both the exchange in the U.S. and the exchange in Lebanon and Morocco, according to a State Department spokeswoman.
Clinton encouraged the first class of TechWomen to help other women in their home countries, stressing that the work between TechWomen and the U.S. is just beginning. “We will continue to work with you, we will continue to support you and we will continue to look for ways that we can empower women and girls through technology,” Clinton said.
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