快播成人

Student outreach puts Informatics on high schoolers' radar

By Doug Parry Wednesday, May 24, 2023

Cynthia del Rosario has a sure-fire strategy for getting teens excited about Informatics: Listen to iSchool students.

鈥淚 really believe in the student voice,鈥 said del Rosario, the University of Washington Information School鈥檚 diversity programs advisor. 鈥淚f our students have an idea, let鈥檚 turn it into something. It鈥檚 more impactful when the students say this is something we want.鈥 

A few years ago, she listened to Informatics students who wanted to start a hackathon aimed at high school students from underrepresented populations. The result was not only a hackathon, but a series of outreach events throughout each year that became the High School to iSchool program. High School to iSchool encourages hands-on participation in activities that introduce teens to the ways Informatics students learn to solve problems and make technology work for people.

The latest event, the Hack for Social Good in late March at the Samuel E. Kelly Ethnic Cultural Center, drew an overflow crowd of 130 high school students and 30 mentors, challenging them to design technologies that address issues of equity and social justice. The event easily could have drawn more than 200 students, and del Rosario will seek a bigger space to host it next year.

鈥淭hat event really drew me in. That was the reason I applied to the major.鈥

In recent years, as the UW has increasingly emphasized direct-to-major freshman admissions, High School to iSchool has become key to the school鈥檚 outreach strategy. The events raise awareness about Informatics among students who otherwise might not have known it was an option. Del Rosario and student volunteers concentrate their outreach on high schools with large BIPOC populations and high numbers of potential first-generation college students. 

The calendar also includes a weeklong online hackathon called the FearLess Tech More Innovation Challenge and an on-campus technology-focused event called the iTech Inclusion Symposium. While it takes time to measure the impact on admissions, del Rosario has seen anecdotal evidence that High School to iSchool events are encouraging students to apply. One such student is Hannah Yi, a first-year Informatics student who learned about the major when she participated in FearLess Tech More while in high school.

鈥淭hat event really drew me in,鈥 Yi said. 鈥淭hat was the reason I applied to the major.鈥

Yi said the Women in Informatics student group leaders who hosted the hackathon made the process of prototyping and wireframing feel approachable. This year, she volunteered to help with the Hack for Social Good, and she will have a leadership role in this fall鈥檚 FearLess Tech More hackathon.

鈥淚 wanted to do the same for other high schoolers,鈥 Yi said. 鈥淚 know for me it was a big help. It really helped me learn more about the major and I wanted to do the same for others.鈥

Cynthia del Rosario speaks to a student at the Hack for Social Good.
Cynthia del Rosario speaks to a student at the Hack for Social Good. (Photos by Victor Aque)

Del Rosario, a Seattle native, graduate of Seattle Central College and a 鈥淒ouble Dawg鈥 who joined the iSchool in 2007, relies on the value of personal connections like the ones that inspired Yi to apply. She works closely with campus diversity organizations such as the UW鈥檚 ; the (OMA&D); and the , OMA&D鈥檚 outreach program for K-12 schools. The Dream Project has participated in the Hack for Social Good since its inception in 2019.

鈥淏ecause I鈥檓 from here and I鈥檝e been at the UW for so long, I know a lot of people,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 feel like my strength is connecting different people and different programs in ways that haven鈥檛 really happened before.鈥

The advent of the iSchool鈥檚 Office of Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, Access & Sovereignty (IDEAS) in 2021 has further energized del Rosario鈥檚 efforts. Del Rosario used to be the only full-time iSchool staff member focused on diversity, and the IDEAS Office and Associate Dean for IDEAS Wanda Pratt have generated more resources and support for her work. She also relies on Informatics advising and admissions staff, who help coordinate outreach to high schools, and from student volunteers, who are often the best advocates for the iSchool. 

Del Rosario credited Informatics students Bandhna Bedi and Kayla Tounalom with spearheading the Hack for Social Good. While del Rosario worked out the logistics, Bedi and Tounalom (pictured at top, Bedi at left) designed activities, planned campus tours, enlisted mentors, and made packets for chaperones and mentors, and made swag bags for students.

鈥淲e were super interested in getting to meet all of these students and give them help we didn鈥檛 have, to give them a connection to a college student that Kayla and I didn鈥檛 have when we were in high school,鈥 Bedi said.

Tounalom, who, like del Rosario, is a graduate of Seattle鈥檚 Franklin High School, said she鈥檚 made connections with Franklin students who received direct admission to Informatics. 

鈥淲e are really seeing our efforts work,鈥 Tounalom said. 鈥淭here are a lot of really cool outcomes because of what we all have been doing together. We鈥檙e definitely seeing an increase in interest in Informatics.鈥

Often, del Rosario has students co-write OMA&D Seed Grant applications with her and take on leadership roles they can use to build their resumes. Student volunteers鈥 enthusiasm is what makes High School to iSchool events work, and del Rosario trusts them to shine when they teach teens about Informatics. 

鈥淎 lot of what the INFO students do is demonstrate what they鈥檝e learned,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the fun part for them. They get to test their knowledge base and test themselves on how much they know while simultaneously making a difference in their communities.鈥