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Digital Skills ‘Break Through’ Across Disciplines

August 24, 2022 School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures | Communication | Art | School of Music

Students in Break Through Tech's Summer Guild Program

92 students in 24 majors participate in tech program’s Summer Guild.

By Katie Bemb | Maryland Today

The computing field both intrigued and intimidated incoming cinema and media studies major Jennifer Opara-Ndudu. Then she was selected for Break Through Tech’s Summer Guild program.

A national initiative with a site at the University of Maryland, Break Through Tech aims to boost underrepresented gender identity groups in tech education and, ultimately, tech careers. And it wasn’t just computing majors who participated; this year’s Summer Guild program hosted 92 students from 24 majors representing nine UMD colleges and schools.

During Guild, Opara-Ndudu and her team built an app they called “Hangout Hub” to help college students find events matching their interests—all while building their confidence in exploring tech-related careers.

In addition to the block-based coding she and her teammates used to develop the Hangout Hub prototype, Opara-Ndudu said she learned how computing could be applied to fields that “might not initially seem compatible.” That was an important takeaway, as 75% of jobs will require advanced digital skills by 2030—regardless of the field.

“For our second year hosting Guild at UMD, we were really focused on recruiting students across campus who haven’t had the chance to explore tech,” said Kate Atchison, the Break Through Tech DC at UMD site lead and associate director of UMD’s Iribe Initiative for Inclusion and Diversity in Computing. “These students get a low-risk opportunity to get a glimpse into the world of tech and see how they can apply computing skills to their field or interest of choice.”

With three weeklong summer sessions (two virtual and one in person), the incoming freshmen and rising sophomores got paid to delve into design thinking and programming using Thunkable software. Beyond the hard skills, they learned about notable women in tech, educational and career opportunities, and more.

The Guild students were mentored by 40 volunteers from Accenture, Capital One, Dropbox, Google, Mastercard, Microsoft, Salesforce and Verizon who helped guide their ideation and creation processes.

Read the full story in Maryland Today.

Photo by Lisa Helfert