Tag Archives: Jordan

Women of Vision, King Abdullah of Jordan, TechWomen

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Last week, I sat with the Anita Borg Institute Advisory Board at a gala celebrating Women of Vision, and in particular, the well-deserved award for Leadership honoring Dr. Maria Klawe, President of Harvey Mudd College here in California. I am dating myself to write that I remember when Mudd was an all-male institution. Maria and her team have grown Mudd from 10% women in Computer Science to 40% – and have kept that 40% stable for years. This unique accomplishment deserves some celebration! Maria is amazing – she is also #17 on Fortune’s list of the world’s 50 greatest leaders.

The other inspiring winners were Tal Rabin (Research Staff Member and Manager cryptographic research, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center) for Innovation; and Kathrin Winkler (Senior Vice President and Chief Sustainability Officer, EMC Corporation) for Social Impact. Bank of America won as the 2014 Top Company for Women in Computing.  Also attending the event were many of my sister mentors who have served in the U.S. State Department’s TechWomen program for scientific and technical women in the Middle East and Africa, including: Jameeka Aaron (of Lockheed Martin), Larissa Shapiro (of Mozilla), Andrea Leszek (of Salesforce), and Rahima Mohammed (of Intel).

Yesterday, my husband John and I drove to Berkeley to see His Majesty, King Abdullah II ibn al-Hussein of Jordan speak at International House on the University of California campus. I was pleased to see the slide saying that 30% of Jordan’s tech industry workers are women – better than the 26% in America as of 2013.

I have never seen the King in person before, although last year I was honored to meet his cousin, Her Royal Highness Princess Sumaya bint El Hassan. Also, when my daughter Jessica and I were on the bus to Petra in Jordan, we watched “The Royal Tour“, a video featuring King Abdullah riding his motorcycle to show off his country. Yesterday’s talk is yet-another event that entered my life because of TechWomen. Mentor Lucie Newcomb (of NewComm Global Group) posted information about the event – including how to get tickets.

TechWomen 2014 mentor sign ups open soon! Please consider expanding your mind, experience, and heart to join us!

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Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson

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Happy Mother’s Day

Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, Paul Dickinson Goodman, Katy Dickinson 2014

Today is America’s official celebration of motherhood – when flowers, candy, greeting cards, and brunch are practically required. John and Paul and I took my mother with her bouquet of roses to St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, followed by Indian buffet at The Mynt Restaurant in Saratoga, CA. We squabbled over who got to eat the caramels out of the box of chocolates she gave me. We missed Jessica and her husband Matthew but hope to talk with them by phone later today.

One of the benefits of my being the keeper of the photo repository is that I have a pictorial record from birth for almost every member of the family, including those below.  This is a beautiful day to celebrate my wonderful family, of whom I am very proud!

Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, Katy Dickinson 1958
Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson and baby Katy Dickinson, 1958

Katy Dickinson, Jessica Dickinson Goodman by Jeffrey Davila 1988
Katy Dickinson and baby Jessica Dickinson Goodman, by Jeffrey Davila, 1988

Wade Dickinson, Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, Paul Dickinson Goodman 1992
Grandpa Wade Dickinson, Grandma Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, and baby Paul Dickinson Goodman, 1992

Katy Dickinson, Jessica Dickinson Goodman, Petra Jordan 2013
Katy Dickinson and Jessica Dickinson Goodman, at Petra Jordan, 2013

Matthew Holmes and Jessica Dickinson Goodman, at the Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest CA, 2013
Matthew Holmes and Jessica Dickinson Goodman, at the Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest CA, 2013

Katy Dickinson and Paul Dickinson Goodman 2014
Katy Dickinson and Paul Dickinson Goodman 2014

Images Copyright 1992-2014 by Katy Dickinson

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We Are Citizen Diplomats

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Last month, I attended a reception in San Francisco for IVLP (The International Visitor Leadership Program – the U.S. Department of State’s premier professional exchange program). At that event, I sent this tweet:

State Dept Intl Visitors program since 1940s hosted 200,000 to US (7,000 by @IVLPSF) 330 later were heads of state: We are citizen diplomats
07:04 PM – 20 Nov 13 @katy_dickinson

I was surprised when this tweet was redistributed several times.  After each retweet, I considered what it means to be a citizen diplomat. I learned about IVLP through the TechWomen program and the Institute of International Education (IIE West Coast). I was pleased to be an ILVP event host myself – having a group from the Middle East and North Africa for dinner and a WP668 caboose tour in April 2013.

The phrase citizen diplomat was used by the State Department speaker to describe those who support the IVLP program. The State Department website defines citizen diplomacy as:

Citizen Diplomacy is the concept that the individual has the right to help shape U.S. foreign relations “one handshake at a time.” Citizen diplomats can be students, teachers, athletes, artists, business people, humanitarians, adventurers or tourists. They are motivated by a desire to engage with the rest of the world in a meaningful, mutually beneficial dialogue.

This week, I have been making travel arrangements for my first visit to Sub-Saharan Africa, as part of the TechWomen delegation to Rwanda in February 2014. This will be my third time as a delegation member, having also traveled to Morocco (2011) and Jordan (2013) with the US State Department’s TechWomen program. While it feels presumptuous to call ourselves so, I think the hundreds of remarkable and generous Silicon Valley women professionals who have served as TechWomen mentors since 2010 are indeed citizen diplomats.

When our 78 mentees from the Middle East and Africa were working with us in October 2013 here in California, the US federal government shut down for 16 days. It was an embarrassing but excellent example of both the good and bad sides of the American democratic system. The bad side was watching some of the world’s elite and most powerful leaders squabbling in public. The good side was watching America continue to function pretty well without them. I imagine the other TechWomen mentors got to discuss all of this as often as I did with our international guests. If that isn’t citizen diplomacy, I don’t know what is.

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen: Day 2 at the State Department

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200 TechWomen – including emerging leaders from Africa and the Middle East and their Silicon Valley mentors – visited the US State Department here in Washington DC for the second day today. This included a formal lunch in the Benjamin Franklin State Dining Room, plus fascinating meetings with Lee Satterfield (Deputy Assistant Secretary of State), Macon Philips (Coordinator, Bureau of International Information Programs), and Sheila Casey (Deputy Director, Office of Citizen Exchanges at U.S. Dept. of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs), plus two panel discussions:

  • Katie Dowd (Senior Advisor to the US CTO at The White House), Jennifer Pahlka (Deputy Chief Technology Officer of the USA, CEO of Code for America), and Erin Lindsay (Deputy Director of Online Engagement for the Office of Digital Strategy).
  • Dee Dee Myers (Political Analyst and the first woman to be a White House Press Secretary) with four TechWomen participants.

We also heard from Chang Suh of the US State Department’s International Exchange Alumni program about TechWomen Alumnae opportunities for RAR: resources, access, and recognition. This month with TechWomen has been an amazing experience.  Our farewell party is tonight.  Then we sadly say our goodbyes as our sisters return home to Algeria, Cameroon, Egypt, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Nigeria, Palestine, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tunisia, Yemen, and Zimbabwe.

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen 2013 Orientation

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Today was the big orientation day for the 78 TechWomen mentees from 16 countries in Africa and the Middle East, and the 106 mentors from 160 Silicon Valley companies. TechWomen is an Initiative of the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs – for professional women working in STEM from Algeria, Cameroon, Egypt, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Nigeria, Palestine, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tunisia, Yemen, and Zimbabwe.

Juniper Networks hosted the event in their “Aspiration Dome” building in Sunnyvale, California. Larissa Shapiro (Mozilla) and I are mentoring Imen Rahal from Algeria during this month. Larissa and I are among about a dozen mentors enjoying our third year with TechWomen. Barbara Fittipaldi (CEO at the Center for New Futures) lead the group in discussions on how to develop and fulfill our visions. It was an inspiring day!

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen Mentor Workshop and Mixer

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We 2013 TechWomen mentors met as a group for the first time today. What an inspiring group of talented technical women! Dozens of Silicon Valley’s great companies are actively supporting this impressive program. TechWomen is an Initiative of the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs:

TechWomen is a professional mentorship and exchange program developed in response to President Obama’s efforts to strengthen relations between the United States and the Middle East and North Africa.  Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton first announced the TechWomen initiative on April 28, 2010 during President Obama’s Entrepreneurship Summit. In June 2011, TechWomen launched with 37 participants from Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and the Palestinian Territories. In 2012, the program expanded to include women from Tunsia and Yemen. In 2013, the cohort doubled in size with the addition of women from Cameroon, Kenya, Libya, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, and Zimbabwe.

We were welcomed this afternoon by Heather Ramsey (Senior Director of Strategic Partnerships, Institute of International Education) in person, and Lee Satterfield (Deputy Assistant Secretary of State) with Sheila Casey (Deputy Director, Office of Citizen Exchanges at U.S. Dept. of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs) by way of video from Washington D.C. The interesting keynote address was by Gabriela Styf-Sjöman (Ericsson Vice President, Product Line IP and Broadband Cloud Computing and NMS), followed by a cultural training session.

Our 78 Emerging Leaders arrive early next month from the Middle East and Africa.  My 2013 mentee is from Algeria – I am so looking forward to meeting her in person! I am serving as her Cultural Mentor with Larissa Shapiro as her Professional Mentor.

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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Combining In-Person Meetings with Web-Based Mentoring

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Yesterday, I published the remarkably high “TiE Mentoring Success Metrics” in the MentorCloud blog. Thanks to Andrina Chaffin (MentorCloud’s Marketing Analyst) for pulling together these encouraging numbers!

In writing “TiE Mentoring Success Metrics”, I was able to put more solid numbers behind a mentoring practice I have used for years:

The combination of MentorCloud’s web-based platform, reinforced by regular in-person group meetings, is powerful and effective – promoting growth in both community engagement and satisfaction. TiE Silicon Valley MentorConnect uses this combined structure for communication. There has been strong improvement in positive feedback from all participants, detailed below.

Both SEED Engineering Mentoring Program (2001-2010) and in TechWomen (2011-now) also used a combination of web-based communication and in-person meetings for success. Of course, SEED was created PT (pre-Twitter), so many of the web communications tools were more primitive then!

Nonetheless, in mentoring programs at Sun Microsystems (including SEED), mentoring pairs who worked at a distance (mostly communicating in email and by phone, with support from Sun’s intranet SEED program webpages) for many years reported the same satisfaction level as those working locally; however, Mentors and Mentees both reported that working at a distance is more time consuming.    In a global workforce, Mentees may work in an area where there are few or no senior  staff available to mentor them. In their case, being mentored “at a distance” is their only choice.  Traveling to see their Mentor once or twice a year at a headquarters event made for a richer relationship.

SEED held twice-a-year events for Mentors, Mentees, and the Mentees’ Managers for education and to encourage different kinds of communication between them. Getting travel funding to go to those events was sometimes a challenge. See “Funding Professional Conference Travel” for some ways this was managed. Some mentees and mentors never met because of travel costs – and  still reported being very satisfied with their mentoring relationship.

TechWomen also presents a variety of opportunities to connect in-person outside of the assigned mentoring relationships, including events such as the Kickoff held earlier this month for alumnae and prospective mentors, and the February 2013 delegation to Jordan.  TechWomen also offers a heavily-used communication network for 2011 and 2012 participant alumnae through its private Facebook page, Google Group lists, and other electronic mechanisms.

May 2013 MentorConnect Metrics from TiEcon:

Responses from 138 of the 185 Mentees:

  • 98% of Mentees were satisfied with their MentorConnect experience. (64% awarded the highest possible rating of 7) – see pie diagram below
  • 96% said they would recommend a similar session to others.  (70% awarded the highest possible rating of 7)
  • 92% said they would like to continue conversations online after the TiEcon program
TiE 2013 Mentee Satisfaction Rates 1=Strongly Disagree
4=Neutral
7=Strongly Agree

Responses from 30 of the 49 Mentors:

  • 93% of Mentors were satisfied with their MentorConnect experience. (80% awarded the highest possible rating of 7) – see pie diagram below
  • 97% said they would recommend a similar session to other Mentors. (83% awarded the highest possible rating of 7)
  • 97% felt that their time was well spent
  • 93% felt that the Mentees were well prepared and asked excellent questions
TiE 2013 Mentor Satisfaction Rates 1=Strongly Disagree
4=Neutral
7=Strongly Agree

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Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

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