NAIROBI KENYA, Tuesday March
8, 2016 - Tech giant, Intel Corporation is this year celebrating women in
Kenya through mentorship and training in technology. The mentorship and
training, are being championed by the Intel®
She Will Connect program, which aims to leverage collaborations with select
women in various spheres of influence, to encourage women and girls to connect
to the internet and use technology to better their lives.
The Intel® She Will Connect
program targets to connect more than 5 million women in Sub Saharan Africa to
the internet by 2020. Since its inception late last year, more than 800,000
women and girls have already benefited from the program in Kenya, Nigeria and
South Africa.
Last month, Intel through the
program launched My Digital Journey, an online learning platform designed to
empower women to meaningfully use the internet. The platform uses quests to
guide learners on how to apply technology and internet in predetermined
situations that are relevant to them.
Powering on the recruitment
drive, Intel has this month kicked-off women-centric collaborations even as the
world celebrates International Women’s Day slated for March 8, 2016. Over
the weekend, Intel together with Couture Africa, East Africa’s first
multi-platform Fashion Magazine targeting women, hosted women influencers to
inspire them into driving the technology conversation in their space and
beyond.
The event, which has been dubbed
Women’s Day Mixer, was used to encourage women to leverage their influence to
connect women. During the event, hosted by Intel®
She Will Connect Kenya Ambassador Ms. Adelle Onyango, women were encouraged
to play an active role in ‘connecting their unconnected sisters’ so as to
empower them to benefit from the Internet and collaborate with their peers
around the world.
The Intel®
She Will Connect program was mooted following the Women
and the Web Report, which established that there are nearly 25% fewer women
than men online in developing countries. This represents 200 million fewer
women than men online in developing countries. In Sub-Saharan Africa, the size
of the gap is 43%— the largest across all the regions in the study.
Intel believes that connecting
women will have a multiplier effect on the economic well-being of developing
countries as it will harness the productive capacity that women hold, to power
growth. To follow the conversations online click on #SheWillConnect
on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
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