Re: “Why DEI isn’t a success story at Seattle’s tech companies” (Nov. 7, Know-how):
The current article on the boundaries of variety, fairness and inclusion efforts in tech rightly highlights the necessity for extra ladies and other people of coloration in pc science. However one important issue was lacking: the educational pipeline. Nationwide knowledge present that girls earn solely about 20% of pc science levels, Black college students simply 8-9% and Latino college students even fewer. These disparities form the applicant pool lengthy earlier than hiring choices are made.
Specializing in office bias and recruitment overlooks the structural limitations that discourage many younger individuals from pursuing pc science. Confidence gaps, restricted early publicity and protracted stereotypes all play a job in deterring gifted college students from underrepresented backgrounds.
If we wish lasting progress, we should tackle each ends of the pipeline: honest hiring practices and the tutorial inequities that precede them. Meaning investing in Ok-12 outreach, inclusive curricula and mentorship applications that assist college students envision themselves in tech earlier than they enter the job market.
Solely then can we construct a tech workforce that displays the range of our society.
David Walker, Shoreline
