Happy black history month

Shamya

Day 4: I love a good gif, don't you? Well we have Lisa Gelobter to thank for that she set the foundation for developing the animations used to produce the images. She graduated  Brown University at the age of 20 in 1991 with a degree in computer science. She served with President Barack Obama as the Chief digital service officer for the department of education and helped improve the website, healthcare.gov Lisa Gelobter is the CEO and co-founder of tEQuitable, a company that focuses on making the workplace more inclusive. tEQuitable is completely confidential and many people use it to expose racism, sexism, homophobia and many other discriminations at work. Shout-out to Lisa Gelobter for making gifs, providing a safe space for women to talk about workplace discrimination and most importantly for being a black women in a STEM field. According to the National science Foundation, In 2012 white women got 6,777 phDs in STEM fields while black women got 684. Black women are underrepresented in STEM fields but Lisa Gelobter isn't.