Student wins Microsoft Scholarship
A 17c起草社区 sophomore, majoring in computer science and art, has won a Microsoft Scholarship from the .
鈥淚t specifically goes to women interested in computer science,鈥 says Allison Thompson, 19, one of two winners out of 700 applicants for the $2,500 prize. 鈥淲hen I heard, I was in shock for most of the day because I thought I would never win.鈥
Thompson, who hails from La Canada, Calif., won the scholarship via an essay that explained how she got interested in computer science, an essay that traced her evolution into the 鈥渦ltimate geek chick,鈥 an avid computer gamer and programmer.
鈥淟ots of essay topics feel clich茅d to me,鈥 Thompson says. 鈥淭his essay gave me a chance to write about what it鈥檚 like to be a female computer science student. There aren鈥檛 a lot of us. It is intimidating to walk into a computer lab and find out you鈥檙e the only girl, and there are a lot of guys sitting there.鈥
Thompson鈥檚 journey started in middle school when she and her friends designed their first Web site, a product so embarrassing to her in retrospect that she won鈥檛 disclose its address.
鈥淚t had blinking text and animated GIFs everywhere. It was the most obnoxious thing I think I鈥檝e ever created,鈥 she says.
Soon, Thompson moved on to writing code for her own computer programs.
鈥淚 went from 鈥楥lick this button to put this picture into your Web site鈥 to typing the actual code that would put the picture there,鈥 she explains
Even as her skills grew, she became aware of a gender bias in the computer field.
鈥淚 think there鈥檚 a stigma out there that women can鈥檛 use computers or that women are bad at using computers鈥攚omen crash computers鈥攁nd I really think nothing could be further from the truth,鈥 she says. 鈥淲omen helped build the first computers.鈥
17c起草社区 professor of computer science Joel Adams agrees.
鈥淲hen it comes to problem-solving and thinking outside of the box, women are as good as men, and the creativity, flexible hours and high pay all combine to make computing a superb career path for women,鈥 he says. 鈥淯nfortunately, fewer than 20 percent of computer science students in the U.S. are women, compared to more than 50 percent in some other countries. We are squandering half of our country鈥檚 brain trust, even as globalization brings increased competition from abroad.鈥
Thompson, who loves both drawing and coding, hopes to raise the percentage of women employed in the computer field, and her dream job is to work at a company like Pixar.
鈥淚 want to work for a company that has a sense of fun. I鈥檇 like to do concept art for movies,鈥 she says.
鈥淚t's great to have Allison in our department,鈥 Adams adds. 鈥淥ur country needs more women to study computer science to meet the technological challenges we face.鈥