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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhite House: Do you know who Ada Lovelace is ?
all the below is from an email from the WH.
Imagine our surprise to learn that we were staring at a portrait of the woman who is considered to be the world's first programmer. Our group had never heard of her.
Ada Lovelace's experience remains all too familiar: So many of the breakthrough contributions of women in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields continue to go untold, too often fading into obscurity.
https://soundcloud.com/whitehouse/grace-hopper-as-told-by-u-s/s-47xPT
Join us in doing something to change that: Listen to women from across the Obama administration share the untold stories of women who've inspired us.
Then add an untold history of your own, and make a commitment to share these stories in any way you can to help inspire more young women and men to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering, and math.
Women were central in the early teams building the foundation of modern programming. They unveiled the structure of DNA. Their work inspired new environmental movements and led to the discovery of new genes. It's past time to write their stories permanently into history, so they can stand side by side with the extraordinary men like them who have used their technical and innovation skills to bring needed solutions and discoveries to our world.
And here's what's worth noting: Telling and sharing these stories will actively help create more of them in the future.
Research shows us that a key part of inspiring more young people to pursue careers in science and technology is simply sharing the stories of role models like them in these fields who have had a significant impact on our world.
Stories like that of Rosalind Franklin, whose research was essential for revealing the structure of DNA. There's Katherine Johnson, who calculated key flight trajectories during the Space Race. The ENIAC team -- six young women "Computers" who were the first digital programmers in America. Or Navy Rear Admiral Grace Hopper, who first developed computer languages and a compiler to translate them into machine code.
If you don't know those names, it's time to learn: Take a look at our interactive audio hub -- and then listen, share, add, and commit.
You just might inspire the next Ada Lovelace.
Thanks,
Megan
Megan Smith
U.S. Chief Technology Officer
The White House
@USCTO
http://www.whitehouse.gov/women-in-stem

Mass
(27,315 posts)Now, what about telling that to men, and also telling them that taking care of kids is a shared task. Family leave is not something for women. It is something for family. Until you stop promoting such programs as "for women", promoting good jobs to women is a loss of time.
Donald Ian Rankin
(13,598 posts)Her achievements were not that significant, but she gets more press than far more important and talented mathematicians like Noether or Kovalevskaya or Germain or Cartwright (have you even heard of any of them? They were all immeasurably better mathematicians than Lovelace, and contributed far more to the development of mathematics) , because computers are The New Hotness, and if you kind of squint and don't look at the details you can present her as the first computer programmer, and possibly also because she was a countess and associated with Babbage, who is also viewed as glamorous for the same reason, rather than an academic who was admired by Weil and Hilbert, who were merely great mathematicians.
DAMANgoldberg
(1,278 posts)but I received the same e-mail from POTUS office. I had no clue who she is, and I have been a Geek for 20 years. The others you mentioned are even more obscure. All of these women should be praised, publicized, and recognized for their accomplishments.