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Money. Google’s Got Next
By Sherri Kolade
Asim Williams, 23, is responsible for creating learning opportunities for kids between the ages of 13 and 18 to boost enthusiasm, self-assurance and fundamental abilities needed to pursue a career in computer science.
As the Google Code Next coach in Detroit – a free, computer science education program that meets local Black, Latinx, and Native high school students in their own communities and provides the skills and inspiration they need for computer science-related fields – he is etching out a creative, technological path for those coming behind him.
Detroit, among other select states, is filling the need by offering coding boot camps and other training programs that teach the skills necessary to establish profitable careers in coding.
“[This program] develops students’ interest in STEM to invent technology that really improves people’s lives,” Williams told the Michigan Chronicle. “Underrepresented people need to be a part of those processes where technologies and where decisions are being made.”
The Detroit native studied computer science and did internships with Google and said that his professional experience and upbringing (he relocated throughout the United States) brought him back to his city, which he described as having “incredible potential” technologically, historically and beyond.
He added that Detroit represents a city predominantly where opportunities have been restricted from Black communities and to be able to experience technological education like that of Code Next “really goes a long way.”
The only group of its kind in the Midwest, a new cohort of students in Google’s Code Next program in downtown Detroit is encouraging young, aspiring technology leaders to imagine what is possible for their careers and futures, and state leaders are taking note.
For Black, Latinx and Native American high school students, Google Code Next is an all-encompassing computer science education program that provides after-school and Saturday programming to prepare them for this in-demand field and potential future careers.
There are more labs in Harlem, N.Y., Chelsea, N.Y. and Oakland, Calif.
The 20-student new class offers access to state-of-the-art tools, live coaches and classes on UX design and JavaScript development. The lab offers programs and curricula that are focused on the future of mobility, from self-driving automobiles to drone racing. The students get to interact with other kids their age from different backgrounds who are passionate about coding.
“Exposing young people to technology gives them more than skills—it gives them the confidence to know that they can build whatever they can imagine,” said Lt. Governor Garlin Gilchrist II. “The students I met at Google’s Code Next at The Factory at Michigan Central in Detroit this afternoon are already
By Sherri Kolade