Tag Archives: technical women

TechWomen Team Rwanda

TechWomen Team Rwanda, 5 October 2025

I am proud to be an Innovation Mentor for the US State Department’s TechWomen’s Team Rwanda! Three mentors (Keana Lucas, Rachana Mitkar, and me) had our first meeting online with the five Emerging Leaders on 2 October, followed by four intensive days developing project and presentation that will benefit Rwanda. On Sunday, we met at my house in San Jose, California, for dinner and further discussion. They enjoyed a tour of WP668, my railway caboose office. Yesterday, we gave our first project presentation. Here is more about what we are working on. Pretty good for such a short development period! We will refine and further develop this as we get feedback from colleagues and potential partners, and our understanding evolves.

Problem Statement: “In Rwanda, professional and academic women face underrepresentation in STEM fields because of the lasting impact of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. This matters because generational trauma causes many women to carry the weight of depression, impostor syndrome, and self-doubt that quietly limit their potential. Greater representation of women in STEM will enhance productivity, expand opportunities, and inspire the next generation of young women.”

Project Description: “The KIRATECH (healing through technology) project creatively addresses the underrepresentation of Rwandan women in STEM by focusing on one of its most overlooked barriers: mental health challenges rooted in the lasting effects of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. Many women continue to struggle with depression, impostor syndrome, and self-doubt that quietly limit their confidence and participation in science and technology. KIRATECH brings together technology, mental health advocacy, and community building to create a supportive digital ecosystem where women can heal, connect, and grow. At its core is an AI-powered chatbot that allows women in STEM to discuss mental health concerns confidentially or anonymously, offering a trusted space for emotional support and early intervention.

Key components of KIRATECH include a resource hub that connects users to professional counseling and mentorship programs through existing organizations, along with a community engagement section that promotes monthly meetups and annual conferences for peer support, networking, and shared learning. The “Share Your Story” section provides a platform for women to share experiences, highlight achievements, and inspire others through authentic storytelling that builds collective resilience.

The project team is currently refining the technical design of the chatbot to ensure it is culturally sensitive, multilingual, and responsive to diverse user needs. KIRATECH is also strengthening partnerships with mental health professionals and women-led STEM organizations to enhance credibility and sustainability. Together, these components aim to build a resilient community of women in STEM who are mentally supported, professionally empowered, and motivated to lead Rwanda’s future in science and innovation. Success will be measured through user engagement, mentorship participation, feedback from community events, and visible growth in women’s participation and leadership across STEM fields.”

I was honored to be part of the TechWomen 2014 delegation to Rwanda, which provided helpful background in my support of this year’s team.

TechWomen Team Rwanda, 6 October 2025

Images (c) Copyright 2025 by Katy Dickinson. If you want to receive Katysblog posted by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! field (upper right on Katysblog home page).

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Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains, Mentoring & Other Business, Mentoring Standard, News & Reviews

Fabric from Togo

Cloth from Togo - new tablecloth

I was honored to be part of March 2024 TechWomen Delegation to CameroonTechWomen is an initiative of the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs that I helped design and for which I proudly serve as a mentor. In addition to the official delegation week in Cameroon, I was able to visit our TechWomen Fellows in Nigeria. On the way, I flew twice through the Togo airport in West Africa and bought some unique fabric.

One of the side delights of my many trips to the continent is visiting fabric shops to see the lovely cotton print patterns. I have written many times about this – including showing where I have used the fabric. My dining room now has an interesting new Togolese tablecloth made up of two fabrics – each with what looks like a splattered / rolled-on pattern on a red base. My friend Anne Karoly and her sister were kind enough to sew these for me. I made a donation to Education for Ministry in thanks. I think the new tablecloth and napkins complement the fish curtains (fabric from Sierra Leone 2017), and masks I bought in Cameroon (2024). One of the other mentors wrote, “That’s a typical TechWomen mentor house 😉 With goodies from the participating countries. Love it.”

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Support TechWomen: Hundreds of Beautiful Daughters

When I started working in 2010 as a Process Architect with the US State Department – Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, and the Institute of International Education (IIE) to design the TechWomen mentoring program, I gained hundreds of beautiful daughters. I knew the program would include brilliant and productive leaders in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) but not that it would eventually include thousands of inspiring women in dozens of countries in the Middle East, Africa, and Central Asia. I have grown to know and love hundreds of them as daughters and colleagues in making the world a better place for us all.

Ten days ago our community experienced a deeply troubling surprise. Numerous factors, including Executive Orders, program suspensions, and changes in the payments and processes of the U.S. Department of State impacted IIE’s operations. In response, they took difficult and necessary steps, including reductions in workforce. For TechWomen, this meant that most of the team went on furlough. Since that sad and scary news came out, hundreds of us mentors and Fellows have been working daily to inform elected officials, news services, and powerful people who may help us get TechWomen reinstated in time for 100+ emerging leaders to arrive in October 2025. Over 6,000 STEM women applied to join TechWomen in 2025. Last week, I was on one of the selection committees that met with the last active TechWomen staff member to get ratings recorded in the hope that the new cohort can join us in the Silicon Valley and Chicago.

TechWomen and citizen diplomacy make our world safer. If we want America to be safe, productive, and effective in STEM and related businesses, we need programs like this. Together with mentors and Fellows, I am working to get funding restored for TechWomen and other programs, including those supported by the Alliance for International Exchange and the Fulbright Association. Exchange programs such as TechWomen are a relatively low-cost way for American businesses to benefit from new ideas, innovation, entrepreuneurship, and worldwide partners. I meet monthly with three different country teams I have coached through TechWomen; it is a vital and deeply rewarding part of my life. TechWomen mentors, Fellows, and community allies who want to join our efforts to reinstate TechWomen program funding, please contact me.

27 March 2025: Today, our community was relieved at the good news that TechWomen funding has been restored and furloughed staff will be reinstated. More on Jessica Dickinson Goodman’s article: https://hackernoon.com/techwomen-is-back-online In these unsettled political times, we will continue to be vigilant to support our beloved program to empower global STEM leadership and innovation.

TechWomen Emerging Leaders from Africa and the Middle East, 2015 by Jessica Dickinson Goodman, Susan Roger, Katy Dickinson
2015 Poster: TechWomen Emerging Leaders from Africa and the Middle East, by Jessica Dickinson Goodman, Susan Roger, and Katy Dickinson

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Coaching TechWomen Team Lebanon

This year, I have the honor to work with sister mentor Caitlin Doyle as Impact Coaches for TechWomen Team Lebanon. TechWomen is an initiative of the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. I helped design this mentoring program in 2010-2011, and it is very dear to me. This is my second time mentoring a cohort from Lebanon, a country I enjoyed visiting in 2013 hosted by my beloved TechWomen mentees, Adla Chatila, Sukaina Al-Nasrawi and Maysoun Ibrahim.

Caitlin and I are working with the six Lebanese STEM professionals to develop a technical project that will help find housing and resources for people recently displaced by the conflict in Lebanon. The team is developing this project to use their experience and skills to help their homeland during this difficult time. The team also has a group of professional and cultural TechWomen mentors supporting them. Some of our team is housed in San Francisco and some in the South Bay, so we have been meeting every few days on Zoom, plus a working dinner at my house. This weekend we are finishing up our pitch presentation for Monday’s TechWomen pitch day. We are very proud of them – wish us luck!

More about TechWomen from the Institute of International Education, “TechWomen empowers, connects and supports the next generation of women leaders in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) from Africa, Central and South Asia, and the Middle East by providing them the access and opportunity needed to advance their careers, pursue their dreams, and inspire women and girls in their communities. Through mentorship and exchange, TechWomen strengthens participants’ professional capacity, increases mutual understanding between key networks of professionals, and expands girls’ interest in STEM careers by exposing them to female role models.”

8 October 2024: Here is a link to the inspiring 3 minute pitch that Team Lebanon gave yesterday about their “Hadak Lebnen” project to create a platform to support over a million recently displaced people in Lebanon.

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TechWomen in Nigeria

After the TechWomen Cameroon Delegation, in March 2024 I made a side trip to Nigeria to visit the TechWomen Fellows there. Private side trips, or as we sometimes call them, mini-delegations, have been an unofficial part of TechWomen since the start. My first mini-delegation was in 2013 with my daughter Jessica Dickinson Goodman when we visited Lebanon. Jessica and I also went on a mini-delegation to Palestine and Gaza in 2016. TechWomen is an initiative of the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. I helped design this mentoring program in 2010-2011, so it is very important to me. I am grateful to Binta Moustapha, Fatima Abdulaziz Sule, Rumana Kabir Aminu, and the remarkable TechWomen Fellows team that invited TechWomen Mentor Kathy Giori and me to visit them in Abuja, Nigeria for the 2023 Tech Community Impact Week.

Getting to Nigeria is painful. Visas are exceptionally difficult and frustrating to secure and after many months of effort, I only received mine the day before I left. However, once in Nigeria, people are welcoming and generous and there is much to do and learn. I learned that we arrived in Nigeria at a difficult time when fuel prices were very high so I was grateful that the inspiring TechWomen Fellows were able to drive us or find drivers for us to get around. I am grateful that the dedicated and persistent Fellows were able to put together our presentations and visits despite these hardships. I would love to visit them again to see more of their amazing country.

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TechWomen Cameroon Delegation

Cameroon Reunification Monument and Statue, Yaoundé, February 2024

I was honored to be part of the February – March 2024 TechWomen Delegation to Cameroon. TechWomen is an initiative of the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. I helped design this mentoring program in 2010-2011, so it is very important to me. I have been on over a dozen delegations since 2012 but this was my first trip to Cameroon. Seena Shankar (Marvell Director) and I traveled to Cameroon together by way of Istanbul. We had enough time for a brief tour of that remarkable city before meeting up with the rest of the TechWomen mentors, Fellows, and TechGirls in the capital of Yaoundé, Cameroon. During our Cameroon week in Yaoundé and Douala, we gave presentations and met many dozens of inspiring STEM women and girls.

My favorite day was when the delegation gave presentations and joined community discussions about environmental sustainability. I gave a lightning talk on Community Waste Management. While trash and air pollution were very apparent, it was also clear that Cameroon is actively working to resolve these difficult problems. I was delighted to be able to visit the Tassah Academy founded by my long-term TechWomen colleague, Janet Bih. She and I have collaborated since she joined TechWomen in 2013 but unfortunately, while I was visiting her school in Cameroon, Janet was in the USA defending her doctoral dissertation at the University of Maryland.

It was a joy to travel with and learn from the TechWomen mentors and Fellows. I am very grateful for the remarkably generous hospitality of the Fellows in Cameroon, particularly Germaine Ashu, who did everything she could to help me get a visa to Nigeria. Our delegation traveled with one particularly determined TechGirl, Britney Moukoko, whom I am glad to write has continued our conversations since my return home.

Since I was in Central Africa for this delegation, I made a side trip to visit the TechWomen Fellows in Nigeria. My complex route to see everyone was, San Francisco – Istanbul – Yaoundé – Douala – Lomé, Togo – Douala – Istanbul – San Francisco. Quite a trip!

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TechWomen Team Palestine Pitch Win

TechWomen Team Palestine, Seed Grant and Pitch Presentation win, 20 October 2023
TechWomen Team Palestine, Seed Grant and Pitch win, 16 October 2023

As a TechWomen Professional Mentor and country Impact Coach for many years, I have been honored and impressed with TechWomen’s Team Palestine 2023. Each year, every one of the 100+ women in 22 country teams invited by the U.S. Department of State – Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs from the Middle East, Africa, and Central Asia works hard to create a project that will improve their home when they return from working and learning in America. Team Palestine has worked especially hard under the horrific circumstances of their homeland being at war, starting two weeks into their six week program. Their compassion, dedication, and intelligent leadership has inspired the entire TechWomen community. Working with my sister mentors, we coached the team in developing a project to support STEM education among primary school students in Palestine. On 16 October in San Francisco, they gave their three minute pitch, and on 20 October, Team Palestine was one of five teams that won an award and seed funding! I am so proud that Team Palestine will help children at home learn science, technology, engineering, and math as part of recovering from the trauma of war.


Linked here are the Project Aspiration presentation slides from Pitch Day, and TechWomen Team Palestine’s Executive Summary. Please follow us on Facebook!

TechWomen Team Palestine pitch win, 16 Oct 2023
TechWomen Team Palestine pitch win, 16 Oct 2023

Page Updated 3 February 2024

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