Napiya Nubuya is The Next IT Girl

In this interview with Napiya Nubuya, we discuss Napiya’s journey into CS, how COVID has impacted learning and communities, The Next IT Girl, being a role model for wellness, suggestions for working from home, the influence of fashion and design, our thoughts on the value of education, and so much more.

  • Welcome back to another episode of the

    csk8 podcast my name is jared o'leary

    each week of this podcast is either a

    solo episode where i unpack some

    scholarship in relation to computer

    science education or an episode with a

    guest or multiple guests in this week's

    episode i'm having a conversation with

    napia nabuya we discuss napia's journey

    into how covet has impacted learning in

    communities the next it girl being a

    role model for wellness suggestions for

    working from home the influence of

    fashion and design on nepea our thoughts

    on the value of education and so much

    more you can find the show notes for

    this episode at jaredoleri.com where

    there are hundreds if not thousands of

    free computer science education

    resources as well as a bunch of drumming

    and gaming content there's a link in the

    app that you're listening to this on

    it'll take you directly to the show

    notes you'll also notice that this

    podcast is powered by boot up

    professional development which is the

    nonprofit that i work for check out

    booduppd.org to learn more about the

    free computer science education

    curriculum that i've created as well as

    the paid professional development that

    we provide the districts across the

    nation but with all that being said we

    will now begin with an introduction by

    nepea hi i'm napia nabuya founder of the

    next it girl infrastructure engineer and

    i'm excited to be here can you tell me

    the story of how you got into it and cs

    i got started in itncs back in high

    school the high school i went to gave us

    the opportunity to be able to go to a

    vocational school or to do half a day at

    school i chose the vocational school and

    from there they gave us a few options of

    certifications that we could get

    different courses that the vocational

    school offered one of them being intro

    to computer video and graphics a few

    others were

    masonry cosmetology nail tech

    electrician different things like that

    my interest was around computer video

    and graphics up until that time i was

    always playing with computers at my

    house doing little tedious things with

    my computer the house computer at the

    time when we were still using dial up

    and from there i enrolled into that

    program and i actually attended the

    program for two years i took the

    beginner class then transition to the

    intermediate class and by the time i

    graduated high school i have

    certification in computer video and

    graphics

    back then it was around when powerpoint

    was starting to become a really big

    thing

    editing videos video photography was

    also becoming a big thing so those were

    some of the things that i learned and by

    the time i graduated high school i

    wanted to know more about it so that

    made me want to pursue a computer

    science degree in college it's really

    interesting where was the high school if

    you don't mind me asking somerville

    south carolina so right outside of

    charleston about 10-15 miles outside of

    charleston yeah i mean talk about a

    great opportunity to get some education

    and experience and whatnot before

    graduating from high school that's

    wonderful right and i think a lot of

    high schools are actually doing it now i

    feel like i was at the

    beginning of this wave of let's get

    students prepared for careers even if

    they don't decide to go to college i

    know little cousins that you know are

    pursuing just different opportunities in

    high school you know being able to get

    credits you know that they can apply to

    college or getting more certifications

    by the time they graduate college so i

    think schools are doing a better job now

    of preparing students for both options

    if they want to go to college or

    straight into the workforce yeah i know

    it's a little weird for me to say it

    because like of how long i was in school

    but i am a huge fan of not going to

    college for a lot of people like you can

    do so many cool things so many careers

    so many hobbies whatever by going and

    continuing education outside of the

    university and collegiate level and

    whatnot absolutely i'm realizing that

    now and it's just like we didn't get

    that opportunity i graduated high school

    college was your only option right we

    didn't know anything else unless you

    were

    going to be a mechanic or you know just

    a blue collar job especially in the

    south you know you don't hear about just

    these amazing opportunities so i knew

    right out of high school college i had

    to go to college in order to

    gain a profession that was going to

    bring in good money for me i'm curious

    so for myself i've had a lot of

    experiences both positive and negative

    that i kind of had a profound impact on

    my

    own understanding of education like

    whether i really enjoyed it or was like

    no i hate this and for you i'm wondering

    if you could tell a story about like an

    experience in education that kind of

    impacted your journey into it and cs oh

    great question

    a specific story

    we were tasked with a project during the

    computer video and graphics course

    insideno our teacher was phenomenal like

    i said with powerpoint

    slide shows adobe during that time

    i don't have a specific story but she

    really challenged me to pursue learning

    more about the graphics outside of what

    she was teaching so it's like you're in

    this class for two hours of the day you

    leave your home school and go to this

    satellite school for two hours of the

    day there's only so much she can teach

    us in this short amount of time so i

    think what really pushed me because i'm

    still best friends with other students

    who were in that class and none of them

    pursued a technology

    career and i think just her pushing me

    to learn more outside of the class

    setting you know telling me just

    different programs to learn you know

    spend more time in this area and i want

    to say that was my ultimate push because

    i'm from a family where nobody else are

    engineers or are in technology so

    seeing just her representation and i

    guess hearing that push from her just

    really pushed me into it yeah and the

    way that you framed that in terms of

    like the importance of learning how to

    learn because you're gonna have so many

    opportunities outside of when the

    teacher is there that's something that

    would sometimes frustrate kids when i

    work with them i'd respond to their

    question with a question and then they'd

    be like why don't you just answer my

    question i'm like well what are you

    gonna do if i'm not there to answer your

    question like how would you figure this

    out let me help you do that right right

    and i think that's what she was giving

    me because even though a lot of the

    projects were in class this is before

    like everybody was having laptops right

    so you had to have a desktop computer at

    your house to

    continue learning about what we were

    learning in class and we had a desktop

    computer home that i just spent so much

    time on and every time she would just

    introduce a new concept i would be home

    working on it after that i have this

    high school box in my mom's garage right

    now and i just think about you know

    pulling little

    projects that i did out of there just

    simple stuff that we think it's just

    super small to us now like creating

    powerpoint slideshows or editing videos

    which everybody can do at this point but

    that was a big deal back then yeah and

    it's interesting to reflect on for

    myself like the

    advantages and privileges that i had

    because i had access to technology at

    home and then when i see some of the

    kids who are like super passionate that

    i worked with like in the cs classes

    where they're like all they want to do

    is just like code in whatever platform

    they were working on but then when they

    get home they didn't have that

    opportunity because they didn't have a

    device this was like before covid but

    then other kids who did could like go

    home and work on stuff on the weekends

    and so it definitely had like an impact

    on equity issues related to that not to

    jump ahead but where i am a big advocate

    of with our organization the next it

    girl we get asked all the time who's our

    target audience is it middle class

    students is it

    underrepresented students low-income

    students and i'm like is everybody

    everybody i want every young girl to be

    able to have this opportunity of

    exposure and you know how they are able

    to get that we want to bridge the gap in

    terms of you don't have wireless

    internet you know let's get her a

    modified you don't have a laptop let's

    get her a loner laptop i just don't want

    it to be a barrier in between

    these kids having access to education

    i'm curious because of

    covid the device and internet access has

    kind of from what i've seen changed for

    the better for a lot of kids especially

    in like rural and low socio-economic

    communities i'm wondering if you have

    noticed that as well if kids are having

    more access to devices and internet at

    home now because of recent developments

    and whatnot yes and no

    yes with the virtual learning every kid

    had to have a laptop or a school issued

    a laptop i guess a lot of schools were

    seeing

    just the risk of kids being able to use

    home devices you know just the threats

    among security so i was very happy to

    see that or kind of curious like oh

    where did all this money come from all

    of a sudden to provide every student

    with a laptop right

    yeah on the downside of that i see that

    at the end of the school year now all of

    those devices have to be returned so

    from august to may it's great they can

    have these devices they're limited to

    what they can utilize it for i will say

    we had an example of this i want to say

    this was last summer because we've been

    doing virtual learning for our

    organization for three this is our third

    year doing it now and they had

    restrictions on using the usb port so

    we gave the girls different devices that

    they needed to complete you know their

    summer camp and we would get errors you

    know completely

    disabled usb ports they couldn't utilize

    some browsers that the software we were

    using needed to be it was only required

    through that browser

    so

    at the end of the day i am happy that

    they are

    getting these resources

    but then i also see the downside that it

    is for a limited time only

    and also

    it's not fully functional if they want

    to do other things outside of whatever

    their school district makes them use it

    for that is such a good point i hadn't

    ever thought of that honestly so like

    when i hear about the discussions it's

    like devices and access to the internet

    but yeah just because you have access to

    the internet doesn't mean you have

    access to all of the internet it doesn't

    mean you have access to all the

    capabilities of the device yeah it was

    really hard the first year we did

    virtual learning for the summer camp is

    because we were all experiencing it at

    the same time at first right it was a

    first for everybody

    so thinking in our head as an

    organization like oh you know they have

    devices it's cool they're doing their

    schoolwork on it but then it's like we

    bring in all this new equipment

    things that you know the school district

    i t departments have not thought about

    that these kids may ultimately want to

    use their device for and now we're

    blocked on certain things so we did have

    a moment where certain girls could not

    do certain parts of the summer camp

    because of that

    you know getting them set up on their

    home computer now so they can utilize it

    and they've never used their home

    computer before they're used to a mobile

    device so it was a lot of challenges

    that first year so i'm on the fence on

    both sides of it so yeah it's a yes i

    know for me yeah my wheels are spinning

    so i appreciate this

    you're welcome

    yeah i'm thinking of like future grants

    and whatnot we need to address that in

    some of the proposals it's important so

    i'm even like in talks now which is like

    how can we get grant

    money for specifically the next it girl

    issued on devices we got laptops donated

    maybe about four or five years ago but

    these were like the real bulky

    laptops i'm trying to think what was it

    hp's or dells i can't remember the ones

    that weigh about 30 pounds fully

    functional

    great so that's what we're sending out

    to the girls as loner laptops and

    they're looking at them as they're the

    most archaic things in the world and i'm

    just like it works but it works so

    just looking for

    being able to grab grant money to where

    we can issue our own things out to

    students and they don't have to go

    through that troubleshooting you know 30

    minutes of troubleshooting during our

    program that takes away from their

    learning time yeah yeah we get that with

    our professional development where like

    a district will block like the website

    like that we're using or whatever like

    the device just isn't working or they

    roll and update and like didn't tell

    them that it was going to happen and

    right now you got to go through the it

    department i need this approved i need

    access yeah it's the whole thing yeah

    and every district is different in terms

    of like how

    much permission they give to teachers

    like on one of them they gave me like an

    admin level password where i could

    bypass some stuff but then on another

    one like they blocked like my course

    access to the graduate courses i was

    taking it's like why can't i go to my

    course like

    you're blocking that

    it's horrible i'm curious from an

    organizational perspective how do you

    hope to close like the gender and race

    gaps that are pervasive in tech it's

    still ongoing i don't have a this is the

    end-all be-all it is something new every

    couple of weeks to be honest as

    different things are popping up right

    now our game plan is just to continue to

    create exposure programs to these young

    women who are aspiring to be in tech or

    they don't know anything about tech and

    considering it to just be an option

    because they're hearing so much about it

    the next it girl focuses on exposure

    programs that are beyond the buzzword of

    coding they hear it in school so much

    they hear it on tv whenever they take

    you know their computer class at school

    it's just coding quote unquote like i

    mentioned earlier we're currently in our

    summer camp right now and one of the

    girls said last week i don't like coding

    i did it in school and i hate it

    i don't understand it and it's hard and

    just all these negative things so we

    create this sisterhood is what we like

    to call it it's just like these are

    women or young girls who are going to

    push you because they're aspiring to do

    the same thing

    so i stopped the summer camp i can't

    remember what we were doing but i

    stopped it and i was like everybody

    unmute yourself and say

    brittany you got this right so just

    encouraging her it's just like she

    because she just kept throwing all these

    negative words out what i told her and i

    was just like you do know you may never

    get coded right you may never understand

    it but that is not the end all be all

    for you to be in tech there are

    thousands of other roles that are going

    unfulfilled right now that you don't

    even know about because you haven't been

    exposed to them you never heard of them

    so what the next it girl does is we

    have our meetings prior to our program

    year starting and saying this is what's

    hot in technology right now us ui design

    drone technology artificial intelligence

    all these things or this is what's the

    next big thing about to come out let's

    do programs around these things so the

    girls are understanding them more they

    may hear about it but they don't know

    anything about it right and not only

    that how is it then circling back to

    what they do in everyday life so

    going back to the summer program that's

    happening now our 8 to 12 year olds are

    learning about intro to it so we're

    starting with the beginning basics this

    is what a computer is this is how it

    started this is why it started etc and

    last week they were talking the topic

    was around programs like how programs

    are created so

    very simple it's a series of steps that

    us as programmers create for a computer

    to do something the computer does

    nothing without us telling it how to do

    it right it will sit there we create

    these commands so we go through an

    example of name a program that you use

    in everyday life they started just

    naming things right after we explained

    this simply what a computer is they

    quickly understood i use computers every

    day microwaves washing machines

    my roomba robot vacuum my car is a

    computer you know just different things

    like that and i had to laugh one of the

    girls said but won't all of these make

    us lazy all these programs make us

    [Laughter]

    and i was like lazy or convenient and i

    said the laziness is up to you right if

    you get so

    accustomed to these things and you know

    i don't want nothing unless it's

    automated but i said i think about

    convenience i was like okay if you think

    it makes you lazy don't use your washing

    machine anymore don't use your microwave

    anymore don't use your hoverboard

    anymore all of these things are programs

    and we use them in everyday life so the

    goal

    right now is just to keep creating these

    programs that expose them to different

    technology concepts

    ultimately so they can find what their

    best interest is in tech and we're not

    pushing technology on them as well so

    it's not like you have to go into tag

    it's just like no what is your hobby you

    like you're a musician you can be a

    producer you can be a engineer right

    just all of the industries that y'all

    are interested in they all tie back or

    technology is integrated in it some way

    somehow yeah i really appreciate that a

    lot of people who talk about cs in

    particular it's often from this almost

    like a colonizing perspective where it's

    like i like this thing so you're gonna

    like it too and it's like

    no maybe

    and i wonder if that's what they're

    being told in school right because it's

    not like

    they're learning about other things

    outside of coding they're like i don't

    like scratch and i'm just like

    please give these kids something else

    because they that's all they've been

    exposed to right and it's just like i

    took it one semester i hated it i don't

    want to do it yeah in my own classroom

    the former classes that i worked with

    they had several options for platforms

    like hey if you're interested in games

    and stories maybe scratch if you're

    interested in music sonic pi is great

    for that if you're interested in art

    animation khan academy if you want to

    make an app cool swift xcode like here

    you go what do you want to explore and

    then kids appreciated that because they

    actually got to like take what they're

    interested in and explore that as

    opposed to me saying hey you're going to

    make this thing that i'm passionate

    about that you might not care about i

    wish that was discussed more in school

    but then i also know it's a barrier for

    what the teachers can teach as well

    because a lot of the times whoever is

    teaching that scratch class or

    whatever the coding class doesn't have

    any computer science experience they

    don't have any technology experience

    they're just giving teachers the

    curriculum and they're just word for

    word reading it to students yeah which

    kind of brings me to another question

    that i have so whenever i prepare for

    like podcast interviews i'll read just

    like any kind of media that i can find

    on a guest just learn more about them

    and the organizations they work with but

    something that stood out was like the

    mentorship that you offer for kids

    especially with your focus on like

    wellness and holistic health so the way

    that it was phrased and one of the

    responses that i saw was you were

    talking about how not only are you

    trying to build like self-confidence and

    worth

    in students through mentorship but also

    to model how to manage it all i'm

    curious if you could talk about that

    yeah oh it's a daily task for me i'm not

    even going live

    i am having to redefine it every day

    holistically for me is taking care of my

    mind body spirit and soul every day so

    putting my phone on do not disturb at a

    certain time right making sure that i'm

    focusing

    on myself from this time to this time so

    my do not disturb hits from 10 pm to 10

    am so you cannot get in touch with me

    after 10 pm at night or before 10 a.m

    the next morning so

    and i could be doing absolutely nothing

    right that's just me prioritizing myself

    and me setting boundaries because social

    media is addictive right i can scroll

    instagram for hours right that's one of

    my approaches also you know just how am

    i feeding myself throughout the day so

    i'm an engineer i've been an engineer

    almost seven years and

    i can easily get overwhelmed like i am

    always super anxious when i'm doing like

    code changes or i'm on call when we

    doing escalations i'm just always really

    anxious like what if i take this server

    down or oh what if this you know the

    wrong semicolon here will completely

    just for this code i'm always on edge

    and i feel like

    it may never go away i feel like that

    paranoia is just a part of being an

    engineer so making sure i'm listening to

    something that's also calming me

    throughout the day so i as well listen

    to podcasts i'm listening to

    inspirational music or listening to you

    know an interview or one of my favorite

    artists or actresses or actors or

    something like that and then also being

    mindful that working from home now that

    i need to get out of this space at some

    point in my day i was working from home

    prior to the pandemic so all in all i've

    been working from home maybe six years

    now so it is a long time and what i

    first realized was

    you work longer hours working from home

    so i have friends who are just like oh i

    want to work from home position and i'm

    like it's not always cracked out to be

    like i don't know if anybody else is

    saying that who works from home but for

    me somebody who likes to be out likes to

    be doing things and social

    being confined to your house and walking

    you know every day is not like my ideal

    you know life i had to you know get

    invested in a co-working space so you

    know if i feel like i need to change the

    scenery i can go 10 minutes down the

    street to a co-working space go to a

    coffee shop but being able to get

    outside of these four walls now that i'm

    confined to these four walls to work is

    a really big deal for me so if i do

    decide to stay home working one day that

    i'm leaving i'm going to the gym

    i'm you know going to run some errands i

    don't want to do food delivery one day i

    need to get out i'm one of those people

    where i thrive from sunlight so i need

    to make sure that you know my body is

    getting in that vitamin d you know every

    day if possible so

    those are just different things i do in

    drinking water i love water i am not

    somebody that drinks a lot of juice i

    don't drink soda so

    keeping myself hydrated taking vitamins

    juicing smoothies that is my

    holistic approach and wellness um that i

    also like to tell the girls as well

    because if i don't feel well that

    translates into my work as well yeah and

    the connection between just like mind

    and body i don't think people realize

    that and focused on that enough like the

    reason why i work out so much and the

    reason why i drink smoothies as my

    breakfast and lunch it's like vegetables

    and fruit and whatnot and the reason why

    i do that is because it has a profound

    impact on my mental health and as

    somebody who suffers from like chronic

    depression i need to make sure i monitor

    that because otherwise it could spiral

    out of control so i try and avoid that

    i know and i was just having a

    conversation with a friend and she told

    me she doesn't take vitamins and i was

    like what

    you need to take why don't you take

    vitamins i feel when i have like i've

    ran out of vitamins and i have not

    started taking i know exactly when i'm

    not taking vitamins like i feel it

    immediately so it's just little things

    and

    i miss the in-person connection but then

    i'm also finding how to adapt to this to

    where i don't feel like i need to be

    back into an office to thrive as well so

    like you said drinking my smoothies you

    know i was just telling you know some

    friends we all skate roller skate like

    let's go roller skating at piedmont park

    this weekend you know just different

    things like that it's my way to

    decompress and then also a way for me to

    still enjoy myself

    and not get tiresome because like i said

    earlier working from home you work much

    longer than what's expected and don't

    even realize it right do you have advice

    for

    people who

    might find it difficult to kind of

    separate their leisure space from their

    workspace like if they're in a small

    like studio or one bedroom apartment and

    like their office is like literally in

    their living room basically that was me

    i just bought a house last year and

    prior to that i was in a 750 square foot

    one bedroom apartment outside of my

    bedroom was my kitchen living room

    office workout room all in

    one space and i knew then when i started

    working from home i was just like yeah

    i need more space advice take breaks if

    you can't do like a long extended period

    of time just take like 10-15 minutes i

    made a point i think back to when i was

    in my apartment i would set times where

    i would go check my mailbox you know

    even if all of my bills are e-bills

    right i get everything to my email but

    just walking down to my mailbox and then

    going to see the leasing agent you know

    we me and her really good friends so

    just going to talk to her i used to live

    in an area where we had lots of trails

    and the trails were so long so just

    going and walking 10 minutes down the

    trail and coming back but just setting

    and planning out your day

    worked for me

    and i have to give all the credit to my

    friend karen rest in peace karen

    definitely was a avid planner i have

    never met somebody who had so many

    planners and notebooks and stationery

    and before she passed away i said sis we

    really need to get your stationery

    business up and going because she would

    always send me links like you need this

    planner i love this planner and i just

    felt like and it's still not organized

    that i felt my life was a little bit

    organized a little better and i found

    myself being able to

    keep myself accountable you know when i

    saw something written down versus oh

    shoot i forgot to take that two minute

    walk today or i forgot to go to the

    mailbox i see it written down so i know

    okay i need to stick to this because

    it's physically written and i can see it

    so i'm holding myself more accountable

    for it yeah time blocking and planning

    and whatnot that has definitely helped

    me out my first therapist that i went to

    helped me go through that process and it

    made me realize oh

    i literally don't have a single moment

    to myself like this is like during my

    undergrad when it was like i start

    teaching at like seven a.m and then i go

    until class until like seven or eight pm

    at night and there's like no breaks in

    between so oh no no i definitely learned

    the hard way where i would start working

    at nine and then next thing you know i

    look at the window and the sun is

    setting it's 7 30 8 o'clock and i

    haven't took lunch

    i got a whole bunch of snacks at my desk

    i gained a whole bunch of weight from

    there and i was just like yeah no can't

    do that yeah it's like a gift and a

    curse it's great that able to sit and

    focus for that extended period of time

    because i able to do that as well but

    it's also

    so detrimental to your health when you

    don't take those breaks like when i was

    painting the house many years ago when

    we got it like i literally just like

    didn't even think about food and forgot

    about it and was like oh wow i've been

    painting for like 15 hours today i need

    to stop and like actually take a break

    and probably open up windows

    it was all trial and error for me was it

    thing that i tried that didn't work

    absolutely the committing to going to

    the gym every day was the hardest thing

    that i ever put down in my planner so i

    had to start setting realistic goals and

    then once i set those realistic goals

    then pushed a little further past that

    so

    instead of saying i'm gonna go to the

    gym you know every day this week i was

    just like i'm gonna go to the gym for 15

    minutes let me set like a

    mini expectation you know just to see if

    i meet that okay i did 15 minutes okay

    now i'm going to work out for 30 minutes

    on thursday so being able to set

    small milestones for yourself and i

    think it's the same way with any goal we

    said in life it's great you know we have

    this big picture but how i go said it's

    just like okay i know i want to you know

    get my phd but what are the steps i need

    to do to get there first before i

    ultimately reach that goal i need to

    make sure i have work-life balance if i

    don't have work-life balance now i mean

    damn sure you're not gonna have it you

    know pursuing a phd that's just how my

    mind operates like i see the end goal

    but i know there's obstacles in between

    that i need to deal with first before i

    get to that yeah that's smart yeah work

    life on balance is definitely something

    to get a hold of before you start phd

    here hence why i have not gotten it

    yet yeah give it time plan for it and

    then it's worth it in the long run but

    it's a lot of work

    yeah well it deserves i tell you i'm

    curious if we zoom out so like when i

    was looking at

    the different materials like on your

    website and whatnot like it seemed like

    tech wellness but then also fashion and

    design was kind of another pillar for

    you i'm a self-proclaimed it girl i

    coined that for myself

    i was a teenager

    i have always had a passion for fashion

    since the very beginning

    i think it comes from both sides of my

    family my mom and my dad's side i'm

    nigerian so if you know anything about

    nigerian culture we are

    extravagant in everything that we do

    from our

    small birthday parties to weddings to

    funerals everything is just a

    celebration and that is also reflected

    in what we wear as well

    growing up and just seeing and wearing

    clothes that embody colors and it in

    patterns and designs and things like

    that has always attracted my eye and i

    was always very particular about what i

    wore even as a little girl and then on

    my mom's side

    she her sister and my grandmother were

    all seamstresses so my mom made all of

    my prom dresses my aunt did a

    bridesmaid's dress for me and a wedding

    and my aunt tailors all of my clothes

    now and it's full circle right even

    though i don't have the talents of

    sewing that but i still you know embody

    that

    so in high school the goal was to pursue

    a fashion degree i wanted to go to scada

    i wanted you know to be in the fashion

    industry some way somehow i didn't know

    exactly what i wanted to do but i know i

    wanted to be in that industry and going

    back to what we were talking about

    earlier i knew i needed to go to college

    and have a promising degree where i knew

    i could get out and start making money

    immediately my parents were a little

    hesitant about

    fashion for when they were paying for my

    school so it was kind of like okay you

    need to do what we want you to do

    so i kind of put fashion to the side and

    decided to do technology because i was

    equally as passionate about technology

    as well

    even though i was not pursuing a degree

    in fashion i still have my independence

    with what i wore to school every day and

    looking back now i was looking at some

    pictures just from college like i was

    doing a lot dressing and going to class

    like now the kids are just wearing

    sweatpants every day in slime that would

    never mean i was getting dressed every

    day to go to class so i was still

    embodying that that never left me even

    though i was still pursuing a technology

    career i get out of college and i'm

    still thinking like how can i tap into

    this you know this fashion sign that's

    when like blogging started to become a

    really big thing and people were just

    like documenting this is what i wore

    today instagram just hit the scene and

    people were actually taking pictures and

    posting them without the filters and the

    good quality photos like it was still

    very you know

    fuzzy photos back then

    and i was spending a lot of money on

    clothes like always hitting express

    american eagle

    oh navy

    and you know just with the college

    budget i had

    and i said okay i'm gonna start a blog

    called the next a girl just chronicling

    what i was wearing that day

    the hottest thing out right now i i

    followed all the designers my goal was

    to go to fashion week and you know just

    a typical it girl and i graduated

    college went to indianapolis that's

    where i got my first tech job

    and that blog got nowhere i did not have

    the time or the commitment like i

    thought i did to post pictures every day

    write paragraphs about what i was

    wearing tag it

    all this other stuff and i was just so

    disappointed in myself because it was

    just like wait i love fashion all these

    years

    but i didn't have the commitment to

    really put into this blog so the blog

    was called the next egg girl and it's

    that idol i had the domain and

    everything for so long i was at a point

    in my life where i was just like god

    what is my passion now because i felt so

    defeated like that i thought fashion was

    just gonna you know this fashion blog

    was gonna be it for me i always say god

    really revealed it to me because i was

    like what am i supposed to be doing when

    i first got my first tech job i just saw

    and i noticed around me i was the only

    person that looked like you didn't see

    any other black

    people or black women

    in the engineering or technology space

    at the company i started at that was

    really bothersome for me coming from the

    south and then moving to the midwest and

    she's like where's all the black people

    here

    and it felt it was very uncomfortable

    for a long time because it's just like

    i didn't felt like i belonged all my

    co-workers were white over the age of 40

    kids grandkids pets and here it is here

    i am this single sex in the city you

    know i'm

    right out of college living my best life

    you know making good money and i can't

    relate to you sir you know it was really

    hard i didn't have a community at my job

    and i thought for sure like before i

    moved there that you know you see the

    office and you just think like i'm gonna

    get along great whatever no that was not

    it for me

    so i was just like i need a sense of

    community you know people who i can call

    on and be like help me with this code

    change or

    can you review this on github for me

    something and i did not have that so i

    kept having this idea of creating a

    business around

    getting more women exposed to technology

    it was at first it was just women i

    started with just women but then when i

    did more research i realized that women

    of color were the most neglected in this

    industry meaning

    we weren't exposed or we attempted to

    pursue but fell off and all that just

    really intrigued me but then i dug

    deeper and i realized well once we're at

    you know 25 the age i was at going

    through all of this it's a little too

    late right i've already considered

    another

    career path i'm already out of tech we

    need to hit these girls when they're

    younger expose them when they're much

    younger so that's when i decided like i

    want to do young black girls at that

    time it was still an idea i still have

    the paper of where chicken scratch and

    just me writing out what this business

    was gonna be and i'm gonna forever hold

    on to that paper

    just writing it out and just bouncing

    that idea off of friends and family

    members and they were like yeah good

    idea so i sat on that idea for

    oh my gosh months months after that

    and the one

    the leap of faith was a pigeon

    competition had just started shout out

    to kendria for pitch east i believe it's

    a non-profit where they help

    entrepreneurs get exposure to their

    programs and pitch their idea in return

    to get startup funds and just start up

    resources great great idea

    and i decided to

    apply i got accepted i had nothing i had

    that notebook eight by what is the eight

    by eleven piece of paper

    and all i had was ideas of what i wanted

    this business to be

    no logo no website nothing so i was just

    like you know i'ma just go because she

    was like no it's for anybody who's you

    know completely at the ground level to

    somebody who already has something

    functioning so i went and i have always

    been a part of public speaking things

    growing up i've done pageants

    i've been on projects in high school

    that has always had me in public

    speaking spaces

    and for some reason i was stuttering

    stanley that day i could not articulate

    anything

    when i went up there to talk about the

    next it girl and i was so embarrassed my

    mom flew into town

    my little cousins who i'm trying to get

    the pursuit tech is in town

    and i invited all my girlfriends in

    indianapolis there and i'm just like i

    am embarrassed it was so oh my goodness

    i was so embarrassed and i just could

    not believe i knew for sure i like when

    i went back to my seat i was telling my

    mom like yeah we can go like let's just

    go and she's like no no you don't quit

    you don't give up like we gotta hear the

    winner so the concept is

    it's patrons you know that are there who

    are judging the startups and it's

    audience vote so whoever gets the most

    votes gets the prize at the end if i

    remember correctly the other two

    contestants were

    somebody who had a full functioning

    mobile app and then somebody else who

    was like in the process of had like a

    beta app as well and i'm just like look

    at them like there's no way they're

    gonna vote for somebody who had nothing

    but stuttering words

    she comes back up there and she's

    getting ready to announce the winner

    and she was like yeah napier uh with the

    next egg girl and i'm just like what are

    you serious and i was just like did

    y'all just watch exactly what happened

    no lie jared to this day i have never

    watched we watch this video back my mom

    recorded the entire thing i refuse to

    watch it

    and this is like

    seven eight years later i still have not

    watched that video so from there

    i can't remember the exact dollar amount

    but i think i got like 350 which was

    thousands to me right for somebody who

    didn't have anything at all i got legal

    advice

    somebody helped me set up a website just

    all these things that startup founders

    need when they just had that idea

    from there it took off like that was the

    ignition that i needed to you know send

    me off and it's just history ever since

    so if there is a

    young woman who's listening to you right

    now and it's like i want to do that what

    advice might you give them to

    pursue a passion like that take leaps of

    fade i had nothing when i say nothing i

    had nothing i got a logo done like 24

    hours prior to that event like it was

    calling one of my friends like you know

    anybody that does logos and has a quick

    turnaround which is still the same logo

    that we use to this day

    but take leaps of save and if you're

    sure you know that this is something

    that

    is needed something that you have faith

    in i say why not like what what's the

    worst that could happen i was okay with

    getting denied or knowing i did a bad

    job that day when i walked to my seat i

    had already accepted that i was

    stuttering all over the place and that i

    was going to lose i was totally fine

    with that right but

    to hear my name call the organization

    i'm just like yeah this autobody

    experience right now i just i don't

    understand what's going on

    i'm not one to say like have that much

    faith in yourself because sometimes it

    does take people around you to see

    something that you don't see and i

    didn't see that right i knew the idea

    that i had and i knew the impact and

    just the meaningfulness that it would

    bring to so many people but i needed

    people to continuously speak life into

    me and speak life into this idea for me

    to pursue it so i also say community

    make sure you have a strong community

    around you that's you know still pushing

    into you when you want to give up but

    first step is just taking that leap of

    faith whatever that is for you if that's

    right in the business plan

    that's emailing an investor you have not

    even met yet that if that's going

    door-to-door with just flyers take that

    leap of faith like sometimes you gotta

    go to like the very basics of things in

    order to you know get that like humbling

    experience like i believe in this idea

    like this will be something huge one day

    i believe in this idea i need other

    people to see it as well yeah i really

    appreciate that that definitely

    resonates i'm kind of curious like so

    one of the quotes that i read from you i

    wonder if it relates to this or if maybe

    maybe not but the quote is find your

    inspiration your work is not for you

    it's for someone else oh yeah

    that oh it has such a totally different

    meaning

    today what i was referencing when i

    first said that but i always say it's

    bigger than me if i'm doing it for me

    then

    i will always let myself down right i

    get denied a grant tomorrow oh well it

    wasn't meant to be or you know

    we don't get full registration for a

    summer class oh we can just cancel that

    summer workshop now i've had so many of

    those moments

    and if it wasn't for thinking about what

    the girls would lose at the end of the

    day

    you know

    this representation this mentorship this

    exposure i would have already been done

    with this right so it has to be bigger

    than me in order for me to still keep

    going and really have that passion and

    fire behind it what that means to me

    today

    we lost one of our team members about

    three weeks ago karen vaughn and cam was

    oh gosh karen was a gym

    karen

    during her time with us

    sacrificed so

    much she was a senior software engineer

    been in tech and she would

    always correct me i would say a few

    years

    no 17 plus years she was very specific

    let these people know how long i've been

    in this industry so she was a veteran i

    would always look to her for advice and

    just direction and how i need to grow as

    an engineer

    and i just think about how karen was

    passionate and i mean passionate about

    showing these girls mentorship in terms

    of what she learned over the years but

    not only that but

    helping them to become the next it girl

    in her time of her being sick she didn't

    complain and sacrifice you know her time

    just to make sure that she was present

    for these girls and to me that's exactly

    what that quote represents if that quote

    was personified it would be curious so

    like i said it has such a different

    meaning now i'm seeing it done in person

    versus me saying it

    i take that with me every day and it's

    just like karen was pushing through at

    some of the worst

    moments in her life right

    and i just think about how she still

    showed up for these girls she was so

    present for these girls she

    scheduling things through her own you

    know personal schedule outside of you

    know anything that we have going on and

    i would always tell her we would be on

    breaks for the organization i'm like

    karen we don't wanna break we are not

    working like can we rest and she's like

    i know but i have these ideas and i just

    need to get these kids out

    so she was always thinking

    beyond herself at her memorial the

    preacher said

    the goal is to help somebody else and

    that's what karen did so that vote is

    caring and it has such a greater meaning

    to me now yeah thank you for sharing

    that i appreciate that it definitely

    resonates with my own approach like all

    my career decisions have been like how

    can i increase the impact that i'd like

    to have on the world or even some of the

    volunteer stuff before kovid i was a

    team lead for habitat for humanity so

    like helping build houses and whatnot

    for people who couldn't afford them it's

    nice to be a part of non-profits in

    particular where you're able to focus on

    helping other people i think about what

    even career-wise that's ultimately my

    goal

    every time i'm like job hopping or

    looking to

    grow

    my career it's just like does this

    business do anything

    that i would say i'm passionate about at

    the end of the day or am i just working

    here just for a paycheck like their

    solutions or their services have a

    greater impact

    beyond the ceo you know getting more

    money like what causes do they care

    about you know things like that so i'm

    really big on that now and at this stage

    in my career how do you kind of like

    iterate or practice your own abilities

    like to get to the next stage whether

    it's like as like a mentor in text cs

    educator however you want to conceive of

    that question i

    so one thing i said to myself prior to

    me

    starting the next it girl

    i was a

    heavy advocate of being volunteers for

    other organizations once the next april

    started it became

    increasingly overwhelming to where my

    time

    had to be fully into the next it girl

    but that's quickly when i realized okay

    we need a team now so being able to

    bring other passionate individuals who

    care about the same thing see more young

    girls of color in tech or

    stem or you know whatever it is that

    relates to our mission i still want to

    give back to other organizations because

    just like you're in need of volunteers

    desperately another organization is as

    well so i make a point to

    even with kovit virtually volunteer or

    virtually participate and give back to

    another organization i'm really big on

    giving like what goes around comes

    around so i want to plant seeds in

    another organization because we're

    getting all those seeds as well we're

    growing and i want that for another

    organization as well yeah and then you

    learn new things like new skills or you

    can network with more people like it's

    win-win all around it's win-win all

    around and i am not a and all y'all i do

    not know everything prior to the next a

    girl i had no nonprofit experience and

    it's crazy to me when people come and

    ask me and i'm just like i still don't

    know like we are literally going through

    this together every day it's something

    new every day so i'm learning from y'all

    who have been in the industry for years

    you know this nonprofit's been around 30

    years and i'm just like help us you know

    we need this help as well so i feel like

    that's how i grow as a founder like you

    said being able to pour into another

    organization i get something back out of

    that and i'm able to also put that back

    into our organization as well yeah and

    getting outside of the comfort zone like

    even this podcast like i'm an introvert

    and i did not like the sound of my voice

    and so those two things you'd think i

    would not have a podcast but we're now

    approaching like 150 episodes and so

    this was uncomfortable for me but i

    learned a lot

    that's like a daily prayer for me like

    god pushed me out of my comfort zone

    because i am a creature of habit i am

    self aware to say that i love what i

    love i am not ashamed of that

    but i can get complacent and think if

    it's not broke don't fix it type of

    thing

    i subscribe to that and i have to be

    pushed out of my comfort zone sometimes

    like i said earlier that's why i'm not

    afraid to say i don't know everything

    that's why i welcome new ideas but i do

    have to be like you know you can do this

    or try it at least one time just be

    pushed out a little bit so that leads to

    a question that i like to ask guests and

    so what's something that you're

    currently working on that you could use

    some help with oh great question the

    organization we are in our i believe

    this is our fifth programming year so we

    have been doing programs for five years

    we are looking number one always have

    volunteers right the next it girl

    mission is representation matters so

    as much as we're teaching these

    technology concepts we need the

    representation to talk about whoever it

    is they doing it on a day-to-day basis

    how they got into it basically kind of

    what you asked me in this podcast like

    our girls love to hear from other

    women men

    who are already trailblazing that path

    i think it's a great moment to step away

    from the curriculum and just be like hey

    i'm a ux ui designer by day this is what

    i did to get in the industry this is

    what you need to know to get in this

    industry i think that's what fuels the

    girls even more like i'm actually seeing

    somebody who does it so many great

    connections have come from that having

    guests volunteers and speakers come on

    during our programs aside for that

    just you know scalability and exposure

    like we're hosting other workshops new

    topics this year

    around

    digital design intro to procreate the

    girls you know get ready to learn about

    hand skill you know digital design

    graphic design so that's amazing to

    introduce these new concepts so we're

    always looking for volunteers however

    you think your skills can be utilized

    within the organization we'd be more

    than happy to have okay so what do you

    wish there's more research on that could

    inform your own practices i think around

    the demographics racial disparities in

    technology but

    being able

    to bring research on where

    the disconnect in certain

    demographics

    are for technology to be

    exposed so

    why the same opportunities are not in

    chicago public schools but are in the

    chicago suburbs

    i guess around just like the same

    technology

    opportunities if that makes sense

    i think at the end of the day it all

    comes down to funding but you would

    think public schools would have the most

    funding overall over like certain

    charter schools or you know private

    schools but it seems like the schools

    that are not inner city schools are the

    schools with the most funding

    are getting kids they exposure the

    opportunities that a lot of other kids

    are not so i'll talk about my hometown

    for example

    my hometown is right outside of the city

    of charleston but it's still considered

    the same area and it was only three high

    schools that had access to the

    vocational school that i mentioned

    earlier the inner city schools the

    charleston county the directly inner

    city schools that were predominantly

    black schools did not get those same

    opportunities now

    that you know technology has progressed

    and school districts are now seeing like

    you mentioned earlier a lot of these

    kids don't have the ability to go to

    college

    they're investing in

    career centers now so i know three

    career centers popped up for the inner

    city schools where kids same concept

    like i had earlier had the option to

    split their school day and go and get

    certifications so but i had that

    opportunity 13 years ago these kids are

    now just getting this opportunity within

    the last two to three years

    so i think research around that is

    important because a lot of inner city

    schools are definitely behind but how

    can we as founders researchers how can

    we bring awareness to this show these

    statistics in order to get more

    availability to them if that makes any

    sense yeah it definitely makes sense i'm

    gonna do like a improv strategy with

    like a yes and to say yes i love that

    and we should also focus on the pedagogy

    differences between the two places and

    the reason why i say that is because

    i've spoken with some people

    who when working in suburban areas they

    will often use pedagogies that

    focus on creativity let's just have fun

    creating

    making interesting things but then in

    inner city schools i've heard some

    people use pedagogies that i consider to

    be very problematic because the focus

    was on obedience and following

    directions and that does not sit well

    with me in my opinion and probably

    doesn't sit well with kids so even if

    they do have access to tech they might

    be taught in a way that makes them go

    why would i want to do this this isn't

    interesting yeah yeah oh that's good

    that's a really good add-on as well i

    think that's always been you know

    low-key bothersome to me because

    i grew up in a predominantly white town

    it's a very small

    five-mile seven mile radius town right

    where

    it's predominantly white

    majority of the population is older and

    very quiet quaint town and i had that

    opportunity

    so long ago and as the organization is

    expanding and we just planted a chapter

    in charleston and

    we're getting this you know

    hey this new career center just opened

    wait just open i had that opportunity

    you know 13 years ago why did it take 13

    years later for the inner city school to

    get it as well yeah that's a good point

    yeah if anyone happens to know any

    research that might assist then please

    feel free to reach out to us and let us

    know but

    i'm all for it if i ever you know pursue

    a phd that would that would definitely

    be my topic

    are there any questions that you have

    for myself for for the field as a whole

    the two-part question how do you feel

    about the state of technology now and

    how do you feel about the alternatives

    available for not getting college

    degrees to get into technology so for

    ces i feel like we're in kind of like a

    weird space where

    let's say maybe even 10 years from now

    this isn't going to be as big of a

    problem we're coming at this from like

    two ends of the spectrum in that we have

    teachers who are now learning how to

    code and learning what computer science

    is they've never done it before and

    we're working with them and they are

    teaching kids who are now starting to

    learn this but then somewhere in the

    middle we have students who are becoming

    teachers who have never experienced code

    and they're like just now graduating but

    be few and far between most people will

    be like oh yeah i remember when we did

    programming in second grade and i've

    been doing it ever since and so it'll be

    much more commonplace they'll know what

    it feels like looks like etc but we have

    this weird like we need to provide

    professional development like the

    nonprofit that i work for does that but

    then we also need to provide pre-service

    education to help but then everything we

    do now is gonna need to

    scale more down the road because okay

    right now we can often assume fifth

    graders don't have experience so we just

    teach them as if they're brand new to

    coding but what about if they had

    several years of coding experience

    before that so it's kind of like this

    weird the field as a whole if we're at

    like a i don't know a seven on a scale

    we're gonna just have to keep every year

    moving up and increasing like what the

    expectations are but then how do we take

    into consideration locations and like

    communities that don't have access to cs

    still and like it just kind of increases

    that divide so i don't know if that kind

    of answers the first part of that

    question we're in a weird space i agree

    i think we are as well so the second

    part the alternatives like i know it's

    weird coming from somebody with a phd

    but like college is often overrated and

    there's a lot of like wonderful things

    you can learn even on youtube like or

    udemy or whatever

    all the college you've condemned at this

    point so that is a big coming from you

    i mean it enabled me to do very specific

    things that i wanted to do i wanted to

    be able to do research so getting a phd

    made sense but for most people you don't

    need to do that you don't even need to

    get your undergrad to do some really

    awesome things some of the best

    educators i've ever had did not have

    college degrees and they were phenomenal

    educators better than some educators who

    had teaching degrees yeah so i'm a fan

    of like more opportunities more avenues

    or paths for people to take that isn't

    the traditional take out like 60 70 000

    of loans and get a degree in something

    you don't care about yeah i agree i wish

    the alternatives would have started back

    when i started college because it's just

    like dang these loans i have to pay off

    now

    kind of similar to what you just said i

    think i got what college did for me i

    understood the why behind it versus just

    learning the concepts of how to do

    something so i understand the textbook

    of what computer science is from the

    logical standpoint of it versus

    just seeing and being taught how to do

    something so i feel like you get the

    best of both worlds in college versus

    when you go to a boot camp

    this is this one skill we're going to

    learn html css so i think that's the

    benefit of college but then again for

    somebody who i need to be in this field

    immediately boot camp all the way

    certification all the way yeah yeah and

    for what like i had a lot of students

    who were just amazing people but really

    bad at school or they just didn't have

    that why should i do this so they failed

    a lot of classes so how are they going

    to get into colleges and there needs to

    be other opportunities for them or what

    about people who decide down the road oh

    i want to actually go back to education

    and college might need not be the path

    for it the more the merrier in my

    opinion absolutely so then the last

    question that i have is where might

    people go to connect with you and the

    organizations that you work with yes so

    anything regarding the next it girl you

    can find us at www.thenextitgirl.org

    and we are at the next get girl on all

    platforms

    please keep up with us we have our

    programming year just started two weeks

    ago so

    we are releasing dates of upcoming

    programs so like i mentioned before

    volunteers we are always looking for

    representation to be a part of our

    program and just engage with our girls

    as well like i said if you think you

    have a valuable skill that can be

    translated into the organization i'd

    love to have a chat with you as well and

    with that that concludes this week's

    episode of the csk8 podcast i hope you

    enjoyed this conversation with napia i

    certainly did and i hope you consider

    sharing a review or sharing this podcast

    with somebody else who might benefit

    from listening to it friendly reminder

    you can find the show notes at

    jaredoleary.com as well as hundreds if

    not thousands of free cs drumming and

    gaming resources because i like to

    create a lot of content stay tuned next

    week for another episode until then i

    hope you're all staying safe and are

    having a wonderful week

Guest Bio

A "techie fashionista" on a mission to bridge the gaps of race and gender in the tech industry. Napiya is a CS degree graduate, insightful, results-driven IT professional with 3+ years of experience with infrastructure cloud based solution projects. When she's not deploying Window Server VMs, Napiya is collaborating with brands to offer creative design services ranging from websites, logos, and branding templates. She is also sharing her tech experience by mentoring and consulting other aspiring techies both young and matured. Young aspiring techies are helped through Napiya's nonprofit organization The Next IT Girl. Founded in 2015, The Next IT Girl is a technology education nonprofit that educates, mentors, and advances young women of color ages 8-22 to pursue technology - related careers. Through hands-on and digital workshops each student is exposed to the many areas of interest in information technology.


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