Education
Vanderbilt University.
Vanderbilt University.
In 2011, Bryant founded Black Girls Code, a training course that teaches basic programming concepts to black girls who are underrepresented in technology careers. After founding Black Girls Code, Bryant has been listed as one of the 25 Most Influential African-Americans In Technology by Business Insider in 2013. Bryant was born and grew up in Memphis, Tennessee.
She earned a degree in electrical engineering at Vanderbilt University.
Bryant focused her studies at Vanderbilt on high-voltage electronics, and early in her career, she was hired at jobs at Westinghouse Electric and DuPont. Later, Bryant would move from electrical companies to biotechnology and later to pharmaceutical companies, where she worked at Pfizer, Merck, and at Genentech and Novartis.
Black Girls Code
Black Girls Code teaches computer programming to school age girls in after school and summer programs. The San Francisco based nonprofit organization has a goal of teaching one million black girls to code by 2040.
The organization already has trained 3,000 girls in seven chapters in cities in the United States, and has one chapter in Johannesburg, South Africa, with plans to add chapters in eight more cities.