Tech Savvy: The impact of Technology on the Safety and Security
of Women’s Lives
Women
and Technology Briefing Speaker Bio
Bonnie
Bracey,
Outreach teacher for the George
Lucas Educational Foundation
Bonnie Bracey is a teacher-agent of change, working on technology
integration projects with classroom teachers and national organizations.
She also works internationally with Global Information Infrastructure
initiatives as a consultant. She does outreach teaching with the
George Lucas Educational Foundation. Ms. Bracey is currently involved
with two MIT projects: the Games Project and Media, Education
and the Marketplace. Ms. Bracey is a frequent speaker at educational
technology conferences and those focusing on bridging the Digital
Divide. Bonnie has been an important contributor to the Society
for Information Technology and Teacher Education (SITE), Symposium
on Digital Equity since its inception bringing her passion to
bear on the core of educational renewal: teacher education. Bonnie
works with CERN and the World Summit on Information Technology
to raise awareness of technologies challenges and benefits for
education locally and globally. Internationally, she produced
the high technology and the indigenous project for the Third World
Summit in Thessaloniki, Greece, and works with the Med Agora Project.
She has worked in 17 countries around the world and this year
was honored for this work. Sir John Daniel, Assistant Director-General
for Education, UNESCO presented her award. She inspires teacher
education to be more effective in the classroom and gives many
resources to promote practical solutions with the understanding
of real world contexts of teachers and children. She is a maven
in the knowledge network helping others to see what is possible
with the support of technology within and beyond the USA.
Shireen
Mitchell,
Executive Officer, Digital Sisters
Ms. Mitchell is currently the Chief Executive Officer of Digital
Sisters a local nonprofit organization focused on promoting and
providing technology education and enrichment for young girls
and women of color. She is a graduate of the University of the
District of Columbia and continues to advance her education towards
a doctorate specializing in Human Computer Interactions. Raised
in the projects of New York City Shireen has always challenged
the barriers she faced with gender, culture, academia and socioeconomic
status. Shireen has over twenty years of technology and human
services experience She continues to advocate and provide support
to underrepresented communities. Ms. Mitchell is currently focused
on issues of the digital divide and gender diversity in technology.
She currently provides technology training and planning for schools,
community technology centers, job skills development programs
and ongoing community technology initiatives. She is a board member
of the Community Technology Centers Network and has been recently
honored as a Heroine in Technology and Outstanding Community Technology
Leader.
Claudia
Morrell,
Executive Director, CWIT
Center for Women and Information Technology (CWIT) at the University
of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC). Claudia Morrell spent the
first fifteen years of her career in education at the Community
College of Baltimore County (CCBC), eager to focus more of her
energy on women and Information Technology she became the director
of CWIT which she has helped to develop a course on “Women,
Gender, and Information Technology” at UMBC and Computer
Mania Day – an award-winning program for middle school students,
their parents and teachers focusing on encouraging girls to develop
and design technology, not just use it. Claudia Morrell received
her Bachelor of Science degree from the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, a Master of Arts degree from Loyola College of
Maryland, and a Master of Science degree from the University of
Wisconsin, Madison. She lives in Maryland with her husband and
three daughters. Her eldest daughter is completing a computer
science degree at Loyola College.
Linda
Wilbanks
CIO, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Ms. Wilbanks has a degree in mathematics, a Masters of Engineering,
and a Ph.D. in Computer Science. She is currently serving as the
Acting Chief Information Office for NASA’s Goddard Space
Flight Center, detailed from a position as Chief Scientist for
Software Quality Assurance. She has taught math and computer science
for 20 years, first in high school, then throughout various Maryland
colleges and finally teaching computer science at the graduate
level.