About 50 girls dressed in green T-shirts and brown vests adorned with colorful patches filed into the Girl Scouts of Southern Nevada headquarters on a recent Monday evening. Their task was to learn ...
Families in Savannah with middle-school-aged students have a free camp option to consider this summer. Girls Code Savannah is offering a free camp at the Georgia Southern University Armstrong Campus, ...
Girl Scouts of the USA just unveiled 18 new badges that its members can earn for computer programming. But these badges come with a typical Girl Scouts twist: Participants will learn how to use the ...
LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Black Girls Code and GoldieBlox are teaming up once again to inspire and educate the next generation of young leaders in technology through the free, video-based coding ...
Shelby Brown (she/her/hers) is an editor for CNET's services team. She covers tips and tricks for apps, operating systems and devices, as well as mobile gaming and Apple Arcade news. Shelby also ...
The number of jobs in the tech industry are growing fast and these jobs pay well, yet women aren’t part of the boom. A majority of girls in elementary school show interest in computer programs, but by ...
HERSHEY, Pa. (WHTM) — One Central Pennsylvania international organization wants more girls to pick up coding. The number in tech has declined over the years, but it is bouncing back. Girls as young as ...
Inside a hot-pink classroom glowing with sunlight, 20 teen girls sit at refurbished desktop computers, tapping at their keyboards with laser focus. They're all coding -- and it's a rare scene, ...
Samantha Dahlby (right), NewBoCo’s director of K-12 education, works with student Fiona Burns in the Girls Who Code program in January 2020 at the Geonetric Building, 415 12th Ave. SE in Cedar Rapids.
In a dimly lit basement room in Roxbury, a dozen girls stare into computer screens. There's a low murmur of conversation, punctuated by the occasional giggle, but mostly what you hear is typing. It ...
Ten years ago, 20 girls from high schools across New York City gave up seven weeks of their summer to gather in a tech company’s Flatiron Building conference room and learn the basics of computer ...