Published: May 23, 2017

If you go

Who: Open to the public
What: "Championing Change: Lessons from 16 Years of Advocacy for Tech Inclusion"
When: Wednesday, May 31, 4 to 5 p.m.
Where: ATLAS Center, room 100
RSVP:

From rural Oregon to New York to the U.K., Å·ÃÀ¿Ú±¬ÊÓƵ Boulder and then the White House, Ruthe Farmer has led anÌýunconventional 16-year career as an advocate for tech and engineering education and equity. And on Wednesday, May 31, she will share her story and lessons learnedÌýin both formal and informal education and policy.

Since 2001, Farmer has focused her efforts on diversity and inclusion in tech and engineering. She previously served as senior policy advisor for tech inclusion at the White House Office of Science andÌýTechnology Policy, focusing on President Obama’s Computer Science for All initiative, as well as chief strategy andÌýgrowth officer and K-12 alliance director at the National Center for Women & Information Technology (NCWIT).

Ruthe Farmer

Ruthe Farmer

Over the course of her career, Farmer has launched and scaled-up multiple national programs including NCWIT Aspirations in Computing, the TECHNOLOchicas campaign for Latinas, AspireIT outreach program, Intel Design andÌýDiscovery, Lego Robotics for Girl Scouts and more. She served as the 2012 chair of Computer Science Education Week, was named a White House Champion of Change for Technology Inclusion in 2013, received the Anita Borg Institute Award for Social Impact in 2014Ìýand the Education UKÌýAlumni Award for Social Impact in 2015.

Farmer also is a guest contributor for Techcrunch and The Shriver ReportÌýand has been featured in Forbes and TechRepublic for her work. She holds a BA from Lewis & Clark College and an MBA in social entrepreneurship from the University of Oxford Saïd Business School. SheÌýis passionate about integrating innovative business strategies into social change efforts.

The event is presented as part of theÌý and is free and open to the public. is requested.