Friday, December 1, 2023

A beacon of hope to many young girls

The girl above has been fighting prejudices that define girls and women across color lines and geographical limits as belonging in the kitchen and not being capable of studying mathematics, science, and technology. She launched a DigiGirlz Initiative aiming at empowering young girls in STEM. 'Although I did not complete my Matric with Mathematics and Science, I did receive good results in Geography, Life Science, and English 2nd language as a result of my extreme hard work" 

My good results came from my second matriculation try(1989).  Thanks to my parents who encouraged me to return to the classroom after spending two years at home looking for a nursing college admission (1987&88)...
Today, I received a prestigious award as a symbol of hope to many young girls who are still shaping their dream careers.

The girl above, far right is Nomusa Keninda with her siblings. 

DigiGirlz Initiative aim to empower young girls into digital skills through coding, gives career guidance towards STEM careers and again connects the girls to high profile successful young female professionals. The DigiGirlz initiatives encourages girls to build their positive personal branding and gives cybersecurity awareness.
The initiative made the club to reach more than 180 girls per year and these girls come from grade 7, 8 and 9. It has gain popularity in many schools in Mpumalanga and Limpopo attracting schools to adopt the initiative as part of the schools' career days events.

In 2020, Ms. Keninda won an inspiring fifty for being a role model of young girls in STEM. The Centre for Public Service Innovation (CPSI) also recognized the DigiGirlz initiative as an innovative initiative. Ms. Nomusa Keninda won a Trail Blazer Award in 2021. Recently, Ms. Keninda, spent five weeks as a Techwomen Emerging Leader in San Francisco and Washington DC. 

Nancy Shiba Primary School joined Microsoft Minecraft Hour of Code

While many students were anticipating the last day of final exams on November 22, 2023, Nancy Shiba Primary School grade 5 and 6 students virtually participated in the Microsoft Africa Minecraft Hour of Code event to learn about Artificial Intelligence(AI) through the Minecraft Coding game and Scratch Coding.

Ms. Nomusa Keninda, eLearning Specialist and Founder of the Mpumalanga ICT Club, and Ms Samukelisiwe Hlomuka from J Kananda Primary School, an award winner for the ICT in Education with Ms Beyanca Struwig of Microsoft South Africa, carefully arranged the event. This event is part of the global celebration of the Hour of Code, in which learners are exposed to computer science education through the use of code.org resources to teach Coding and Robotics in schools.

“We were learning too, because AI is a new technology that is starting to affect all of us” according to Keninda. We discovered that AI still has many biases. In one of the exercises given, the AI robot did not recognize the diversity of learners who were receiving food from the AI robot, which was supposed to serve learners, because some learners were shorter and had darker complexion than what the AI was programmed to detect. During the exercises, students observed how to debug the AI software to accept diversity and inclusiveness.

 Samukelisiwe Hlomuka

When Ms Hlomuka inquired if they were familiar with the coding game, one child replied, “I know about Minecraft because I play it on my phone.” What was most intriguing about Minecraft in this session was that the learners were given the option to create their own game by coding it from start rather than consuming computer games.

Following the Minecraft AI class, learners had fun creating their own game using the Scratch Coding environment. The pleasure of having a tablet on their desks was demonstrated by their brave listening during the coding sessions as they followed instructions led by Keninda and Hlomuka. Other classes were taught by Glenda Maselesele and Duduzile Mashinini who are Tangible Africa coding evangelists.

“Since I came from America on a leadership and Mentorship program, I can see there is a lot of demand for learners to learn computer science, I can relate from what I learnt from San Francisco.” Keninda stated.

 Published by Witbank News on  01 December 2023