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Jul
09

She’s Geeky – Twin Cities, An unConference for Women in Science & Tech

Friday & Saturday August 6 & 7, 2010
Science Museum of Minnesota, St. Paul

She’s Geeky hosts unConferences across North America, providing a unique environment for women working in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering & Math) fields to learn from one another, grow networks, connect across generations and discuss issues (for more on the what, why, and how of She’s Geeky, scroll down the page).  

As the host committee of the first She’s Geeky event in the Twin Cities, we’re excited and committed to making this event for women and girls in tech rock. Please join us for 2 days of shared learning and networking.  

Sincerely,  

Liz Tupper (@etupper)
Jacque Urick (@moarinternets)
Tami Esslinger (@too_much_boredm)
Whitney Shaw ( @whitneytaylor)
Nicky Witters ( @nickywitters
Amelie Colllins ( @panelectric)   
Elizabeth Pettersen ( @betz_mn
Karen Scott
Jody Colbeen
along with the She’s Geeky national organizer –
Heidi Nobantu Saul (@nobantu)  

She’s Geeky — Twin Cities  

We are very excited to announce the Science Museum of Minnesota will be hosting the She’s Geeky unConference and thank them for their generous support! The (very) exact location is at 44° 56′ 34″ North latitude, 93° 05′ 54″ West longitude. For more information about how latitude and longitude are determined, visit this NASA page.  

Science Museum of Minnesota  

The Science Museum’s address is 120 W. Kellogg Boulevard (map here), across from the RiverCentre in downtown St. Paul, MN.  

She's Geeky Unconference

(Image by Melissa Lewis, taken January 31, 2009 at She's Geeky, Mountain View, CA)

 

What is She’s Geeky about?  

She’s Geeky convenes to inspire women technologists for the future and advance systemic change in tech culture. She’s Geeky provides a space to create enduring communities to foster collaboration and innovation among women professionals working in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM). She’s Geeky invites women to propose and lead sessions of direct interest to share knowledge and leadership.   

She's Geeky Unconference

(CA Sec of State, Debra Bowen. Image by Melissa Lewis.)

 

She’s Geeky events have already fostered some amazing technical conversations and changed the world. For example, at She’s Geeky 2009, Debra Bowen, Secretary of State for California, attended a She’s Geeky session on cloud computing. With budget pressures looming, she faced having to cut staff positions in the following few months. But by summer of 2009, she had worked with her staff to use what she learned at She’s Geeky and other follow up research, to move California’s state records and business sites and data to servers in the cloud. This move meant she saved enough money that she didn’t have to cut the three staff she otherwise would have.  

How did She’s Geeky start?
In early 2007 a group of women working in the high-tech sector in the San Francisco Bay Area recognized the need for a gathering space where women who self-identify as geeky could meet in person to support, educate, and share experiences with each other. Although many organizations already existed for women in different areas of technology and as well to encourage girls to pursue careers in such fields, there was no commons area that:  

  • brought all interested individuals and organizations together;
  • supported peer-to-peer learning exchange;
  • built connections and established relationships across diverse communities and disciplines to support women technologists; and
  • specifically attended to retaining women in technology fields through community.

Rather than creating another niche women-in-tech organization, we decided to work with and promote existing activists and organizations, inviting them all to meet at an interactive event called an unConference.  

She's Geeky Unconference Agenda Wall, 2007

She's Geeky Unconference Agenda Wall, 2007

 

What is an unConference?
Beginning at 9 AM each day, we start with a agenda blank wall. In less than an hour, with a facilitator guiding the process, attendees create a full day, multi-track conference agenda that is relevant and inspiring to everyone there. All are welcome to put forward presentations or propose conversations. As women register you can add yourself to the wiki list of attendees and also propose sessions. You can read more about unConferences here.  

She's Geeky Unconference

(Image by Melissa Lewis, She's Geeky 2009)

 

Are you a woman? Are you a Geek?
This event is for you!

We invite women from a diverse array of technological fields and those doing technology within non-technical fields. This includes: 

  • Engineers
  • Scientists
  • CEO’s
  • Coders/Programmers
  • Designers
  • Open Source
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Product Managers
  • Project Managers
  • Internet Marketers
  • Users of Tech Tools
  • Gadget Enthusiasts
  • Hardcore Hackers
  • Video Geeks
  • Gamers
  • Nonprofit Technology
  • ….whatever you think is
Mother Daugher Coders

Image by Taken by Heidi Nobantu Saul, She's Geeky Bay Area 3 - 2010

 

How does She’s Geeky work for girls?
You can bring your daughters! We even created a special ticket price for them. Girls as young as 9 years old have attended She’s Geeky with their mothers / aunts / mentors.  

There is a lot of research showing that women and girls need role models and mentors, as examples of what they can do professionally. She’s Geeky is an opportunity to show girls what other women are doing professionally in technical fields, and to help them network with potential mentors.  

She's Geeky Session: Yoga at your Desk

She's Geeky Session: Yoga at your Desk, Image by Heidi Nobantu Saul

 

How does She’s Geeky run?
Both days format will be the same, beginning with group/interactive agenda setting in the morning for the first hour. Then sessions will commence, with a lunch break in the middle of the day. At the end of each day, we’ll reconvene to talk about what we learned, what mattered, and highlight the best of the day.  

Each day will have new things to offer based upon what happens with the agendas!  

How do I attend?
Register today: Eventbrite
You can choose one or both days of the event, and we have special pricing for girls.  

How can I help?
Consider donating a paid registration for a woman in need on the Eventbrite site.
And ask your company or organization to sponsor the event.

8 comments

  1. Tweets that mention She’s Geeky – Twin Cities, An unConference for Women in Science & Tech – She's Geeky -- Topsy.com says:

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  2. Kate-Madonna Hindes says:

    This will be the HIGHLIGHT of my summer. #GoGeeksGo

  3. Tamara Vose says:

    Questions….

    1. Can you give examples of conference schedules at other locations? What are some examples of the sessions?
    2. Should my proposed session be added to the days schedule, what should I bring for my presentation? Powerpoint? Handouts? Additionally, how long should it be?

  4. Mary Hodder says:

    Hi Tamra,

    Up above there is a smaller version of this image: http://www.shesgeeky.org/sg/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/SGagendawall2007.jpg which shows the sessions proposed for the first she’s geeky in 2007.

    There are also sessions here on these images:
    She’s Geeky 2009 Bay Area:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unknown8bit/3240089927/
    She’s Geey 2009 Washington DC:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/jennifermyronuk/4128521446/

    I’d suggest that you review those images for past sessions (you can see large sizes by clicking on “action” and then choosing “see all sizes” if reading them is too hard at the links above).

    People propose technical sessions (java script hacks or drupal hacks or cloud computing etc) or science sessions (rocket fuel and space travel or biotech hacks for new drug development etc) or policy and social sessions like (privacy and your users or identity policy etc) or leadership and business sessions (like mentorships and leadership for women — a session I’ve led twice at She’s Geeky, or funding your startup, or How to become a VC — another session I organized with women VCs from Sand Hill Road in Silicon Valley) or any other kind of hack (like Body Hacks which was about things you could do to your body — not plastic surgery.. but things like chip implants and technical things.. or Bee Keeping Hacks, a session I attended last January at the Bay Area SG).

    Sessions are sometime led with slides and presentations.. if it’s an instructive session.. but most things are discussions.. share a perspective on something .. like your ideas about how android programming works, and then ask questions and discuss issues.

    When you propose, you’ll stand up to the mic, state your name, and say what you want to discuss and who should attend (like maybe engineers and people interested in that tech.. or maybe business people and engineers interested in starting a business). Then you walk over to the wall, and post the session in a room you think is the right size and has what you need (projector?)… while the next person tells their name, session topic and who it’s directed toward, and on and on until everyone has stated their session idea for the day.

    Sometimes people realize that two sessions are the same.. and agree to combine. We just work it out in the room on the fly. But the agenda wall gets built by all of us and then after the opening session, we all disburse to different sessions of interest.

    Also.. sessions are usually an hour.

    I hope that helps.

    mary

  5. HechingerEd Blog | Why do girls steer clear of science, technology, engineering and math? says:

    [...] On a related note: A She’s Geeky “unConference” for women in STEM careers and their daughters also is planned Aug. 6-7 at the Science Museum of Minnesota. Details. [...]

  6. Unconference in Style at She’s Geeky! « Girls in Tech Minneapolis says:

    [...] Twin Cities unConference [...]

  7. Tips for Women Submitting to Conferences says:

    [...] let me give a quick overview of the conference.  She’s Geeky was a two day conference of women interested in technology and science using an un-conference [...]

  8. Why Conference or Unconference Wear Should Say “Work” and not “Weekend” | Fabuliss...Success with Style™ | Image Consulting, Style Makeovers, Presentations | Minneapolis St. Paul says:

    [...] column after attending several great local conferences over the past couple of months, including She’s Geeky Twin Cities and Minnesota Blogger [...]

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