Grant to DePauw to help support diversity access to computers

Monday, June 25, 2018

A $25,000 grant to DePauw University from the Ball Venture Fund Competition will fund “Roadmap for Students of Color in Computing Program,” an initiative designed to improve access to computer science for traditionally underrepresented students.

The competition, sponsored by the Ball Brothers Foundation of Muncie and administered by Independent Colleges of Indiana (ICI), is in its 20th year. It aims to provide colleges with seed funds for innovative start-up projects.

ICI received 28 submissions from 21 member institutions this year. DePauw is one of five schools to be awarded a grant.

“DePauw’s $25,000 grant will address the severe under-representation of students of color in computing (SoCC) by widening the current institutional pipeline,” notes ICI’s announcement notes. “Attaining near parity in the number of women and men majoring in computer science, as well as integrating insights from focus group work with students of color, will guide efforts to understand the importance of belonging in students’ persistence and success in computer science.”

Gloria C. Townsend, professor of computer science, and Khadija J. Stewart, associate professor of computer science, co-wrote the successful DePauw grant application.

The two professors piloted efforts to create a Students of Color in Computing group at DePauw three years ago. Their efforts resulted in collaborations with the University’s Christian Center for Diversity and Inclusion and, with Mellon Foundation grant money, the development of student programs featuring alumni such as Marvin Flewellen, a 1985 DePauw graduate and senior director of INVESCO. The program also created an opportunity for a National Science Foundation-sponsored student summer research experience.

The Ball Venture grant will continue the Mellon project work and will create videos that spotlight both current students of color in computer science as well as DePauw alumni of color who work in the industry.

“I love the two themes that embed themselves in the Ball Venture grant process: Stepping-stone progress and collaboration,” Townsend said.

Stewart added,”The ICI grant will allow us to build on our important work and show students windows of opportunity in a field that is ripe with opportunities for growth and success.”

Independent Colleges of Indiana Inc. is a nonprofit association that represents the state’s 30 private nonprofit colleges and universities.

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