“Girls who code (Stelpur forrita) is a summer workshop designed to increase interest in and improve the gender balance in computer science and software engineering and to reduce dropout rate of female and genderqueer students currently enrolled in the subjects,“ say Saeeda Shafaee and Theresia Mita Erika, students of computer science at the University of Iceland. In August they will host a weeklong programme with the aim of introducing women and genderqueers to the possibilities within IT. Among the topics covered are e-commerce, cyber security, language technology and innovation.
Saeeda and Mita are both well into their bachelor studies in computer science and say that with this initiative they also want to encourage underrepresented minorities such as immigrants, women and genderqueer people to consider IT as a career path, being immigrants themselves. Their stories are quite fascinating.
Mita is originally from Indonesia but moved to Iceland in the year 2016 after meeting her Icelandic husband in Japan where they were both studying. Formally trained as a dressmaker, she took up studies in Icelandic as a second language and completed a degree in both Icelandic and Chinese studies in 2022. “I used to work in tourism and I studied Chinese because I wanted to use the language due to the increasing numbers of Chinese tourists in Iceland,“ Mita explains.
Then COVID hit the world and the tourism industry came to a standstill, so Mita decided to find a new career. “I decide to take a few computer science classes as they are practical skills that my former coworkers have benefitted from. I was not brave enough to fully commit to enrolling in the programme before 2022 because I wasn’t sure if I could be this stereotypical image of a computer scientist, at least the one in my mind. Of course, it all changed when I took Computer Science 1 which was taught by Ebba Þóra Hvannberg, the only female professor in the department. I truly felt that I could just be myself and succeed as long as I try hard enough. I am so thankful for Ebba’s patience, the time and support she continues to give to the students really made an impact on me," says Mita.
Saeeda came to Iceland as a refugee in 2012. Originally from Afghanistan and born in Iran, she has now spent half of her life in Iceland. Interestingly enough, she never thought she would wind up in computer science, as her childhood dream was to become a doctor and help people. "After the death of my grandfather, I realized it was not my dream to become a doctor, but rather someone who could have helped him walk again. With him gone, I found myself deserted, lost, and without any passion."
Her first point of contact with computer science was during COVID when she accidentally overheard a cyber security course that her sister was taking. "It was fascinating how involved the students were, and the teacher spoke so passionately about everything that it made me want to listen more and guess the correct answers to his questions," says Saeeda. Two years later, she enrolled in computer science at the University of Iceland.