KCWiT diversifying Kansas City’s tech workforce with new program

March 22, 2016  |  Kat Hungerford

A Kansas City organization is working to update your mental picture that software programmers are guys hunched over a keyboard in a dark room speedily typing code.

The change? Replace the man in the picture with a woman. Well, and the dark room — that’s not the most healthy environment for any programmer.

[pullquote]“I wish there was a magic wand to wave and create experience female developers overnight, but there’s not.”

– Jennifer Wadella [/pullquote]

With the local demand for developers far outpacing the supply, Kansas City Women in Tech has partnered with Django Girls to offer a free, three-day workshop this summer that will teach women the basics of web programming and the Django web framework.

Django is a set of open-source web development tools that helps programmers take web applications from drawing board to launch quickly.

The workshop, which takes place June 24 to 26, seeks to fill the workforce gap while increasing diversity in the male-dominated tech world, KCWiT founder Jennifer Wadella said.

“I hear from tech employers all the time that they want to diversify their teams, and I have to tell them that there just aren’t that many women out there to hire,” Wadella said. “I wish there was a magic wand to wave and create experience female developers overnight, but there’s not. I think giving women a starting point through workshops like Django Girls … is how we’ll eventually be able to grow the talent pool in the ways our tech scene needs.”

She added that other ongoing programs like Coding & Cocktails, along with an expanding network of mentors, has helped achieve progress on those goals. It seems to be working, because the City of Fountains recently was named the No. 2 city in the nation for women in tech due primarily to the area’s equal pay grade for women and men in the industry and the high-number of local tech jobs — 33.6 percent — that women hold.

Django Girls is a nonprofit that helps organize and teach the Python and Django web frameworks to women around the world. The organization partners with local women to create a supportive, judgement-free learning environment, said Sara Heins, a Django Girls coach who will be running the Kansas City workshop.

“Programming has a stigma that comes along with it,” Heins said. “Django Girls breaks down that stereotype. The program shows that learning how to code is more about problem solving and critical thinking, and less about whether or not you’ve been building computers since you were 10.”

Heins hopes that the workshop will introduce women to a field they may not have considered before and give them a set of tools both professionally and personally.

“I hope participants can take away a new approach to problems,” she said. “The program won’t turn you into a full-fledged developer overnight, but it will give you the tools to learn how to tackle the problems you’ll face in programming — and other aspects of your life — with a fresh perspective. Django girls will give you a good starting place to begin your journey through web development and the confidence needed to continue learning a challenging craft.”

Women can find out more about and register for the free workshop here.

[adinserter block="4"]

2016 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Mizzou students started making real angel investments from campus a decade ago; now they need more capital

    By Tommy Felts | February 21, 2023

    COLUMBIA, Missouri — The college-aged leaders of Mizzou’s AACE Venture Fund are learning as they go: not just how to invest in real startups across the region, but how to make the university’s long-running student investment program sustainable. “We’re having real-world experiences — such as getting on the phone with founders, doing due diligence and…

    10 startups tapped for K-State accelerator; heavy emphasis on KC founders (and a chance at $100K in grants)

    By Tommy Felts | February 3, 2023

    MANHATTAN, Kansas — Half of the entrepreneurs in a new K-State accelerator cohort hail from Kansas City with other founders joining from Topeka, Wichita and across the nation. The Kansas State University College of Business Administration has selected 10 high-potential startup ventures for participation in the Center for Entrepreneurship Accelerator program. The program is intended…

    ‘Brain power’ across the street: How this innovation park hopes to keep university talent in Kansas after graduation

    By Tommy Felts | January 31, 2023

    Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to Entrepreneurial Growth Ventures (EGV), a business unit of NetWork Kansas supporting innovative, high-growth entrepreneurs in the State of Kansas. [divide] LAWRENCE — A partnership…

    $2M grant expected to fuel workforce training, equity hub led by BioNexus KC, Missouri bioscience partners

    By Tommy Felts | January 31, 2023

    The Kansas City region must level up to meet the demand of the expanding life sciences industry and support underserved job seekers, said Dennis Ridenour, announcing a $2 million in federal funds aimed at boosting readiness to fill talent shortages. The funding award will establish the “Bioscience Industry Occupational Training and Equity Collaborative Hub for…