There's been a lot of talk about “closing the gender gap” in the tech community lately.

And there's good reason for those conversations.

Here are the facts:

  1. There’s a troubling gap in equality between male and female developers (according to a study done in 2016, the ratio was 80% men, 20% women).
  2. To address this gap, something drastic has to change.
  3. We're committed to increasing diversity in tech, and we want to inspire more  female developers to keep doing what they’re doing.

These women are bold career changers who are disrupting tech with their newfound skills.

Read more about a few of these women who’ve changed careers with Thinkful.

Keri Spencer | Jr. Software Developer

Did you have a traditional computer science background?

Nope!

How did you decide a developer career path was right for you?

I  studied many topics and subjects in schools and various education  sources. I could never really settle on anything long term. I eventually  jumped into coding when I saw how much my husband and our friends enjoyed programming, building applications, and solving problems.

A huge plus for me is as a developer is you always have the opportunity to learn and grow in your field — and get paid for it.

What’s  your advice for aspiring female developers as they plan their career changes?

Move as fast as you can and set big goals for yourself.

You  are only doing yourself a disservice if you commit a little bit of time per week. Jump in with both feet. Get up early and stay up late. The  biggest change in my performance came when I pushed myself to get up earlier, stay up later and limit my social life. Live, work, and breath coding. Use a timer and make sure that you aren’t selling yourself short by taking more time overall than absolutely necessary.

By committing  more time, you're reaching your goals sooner but providing less time between coding sessions to forget all of the knowledge you have been  soaking in.

Be sure to surround yourself with like-minded people and a great support system.

Find out where other programmers hang out  (hint: Search Reddit in your area too!), ask your friends to help you  with coding challenges or find alternate ways to expand your mind in  this field. It can be a lot of fun working through tutorials together and getting creative with your education. These friends can be extremely  useful when you get stuck, need motivation and provide great resources  and links like Confreaks to keep your finger on the pulse and education moving forward.

I  find that doing something simple like puzzles or trying something new that still flexes those mental muscles can be a  great way to break away from the computer and come back refreshed.

Then go back to those problems that you might not have been able to solve when concentrating at the time.

Jessica Roque | Full-Stack Developer

What’s the best piece of advice that you received when you switched careers into development?

A  mentor that I had here at Thinkful advised me to start to think of Google as an extension of my brain, and this really helped when I would start to get overwhelmed by just how much there is to know about developing. While it definitely helps to commit some things to memory, like keyboard shortcuts and a general understanding of the topics, you can dive into  the nitty-gritty details of the topics as you go and as you need them.

When I first started, it was hard to not feel like a failure when I had  to look up syntax or would read an article and didn’t know what a term meant. But that’s just a part of the job. You don’t need to be a  memorizing machine and you don’t have to know it all.

Take  solace in the great resource that is the Internet. If you have a good  sense of reading comprehension, practice often, and use your resources,  you will succeed.

What gave you the final push/encouragement to make this career change, and enroll?

I  had wanted to learn how to code since I was just a little kid, but a general lack of confidence and a series of excuses had prevented me from learning enough to make the full career change. After making the  transition from college to the real world, I craved a career where there  was a continuous challenge to learn, a sense of autonomy, a way to objectively measure my progress, and the possibility for remote work.

I had ideas of apps that I would make if only I knew how, and I really wanted to learn. The options were to either keep doing work that wasn’t fulfilling, or take a leap into the unknown so that I could create the lifestyle that I wanted.

I  found Thinkful and loved that it was project-based, flexible, remote,  offered mentorship, and taught computer science principles too.

It seemed like a great fit, so I leaped. Best decision ever.

What’s your advice for aspiring female developers as they plan their career changes?

I have two pieces of advice:

Expect to be imperfect and know that your failures mean that you are making progress.

If  you can get past the initial  holy-crap-I-don’t-know-what-any-of-this-means-bangs-head-on-keyboard, the mumbo jumbo will start to become more familiar and you will  understand it. Tenacity is key.

Bring  your unique background and interests to the table and think of how you  can make apps to serve those areas in your projects.

Coding  is more fun when you’re making something that interests you, and when  you’re having fun you’re more motivated to go outside of your comfort zone.

Laura Slingerland | Web Developer

What’s the best piece of advice that you received when you switched careers into development?

The best piece of advice I received was to:

“Fake it ’til you make it.”

It  sounds cliché but I really do find it true in this field. For me, it applied more to my confidence than my actual skill. I took every opportunity to talk about being a  developer and introduce myself as a developer before I even had a job. I  really think it helped me be confident in that role during interviews.

What gave you the final push/encouragement to make this career change, and enroll with Thinkful?

I  was in a unique season of life where I had a newborn daughter and was  working from home for a design firm. I had always been interested in  development but couldn’t see an opportunity for me to make that  transition.

When my daughter was about 8 months old, the firm I was working with downsized and I was out of work. That unexpected life change opened the door for me to enroll!

What’s your advice for aspiring female developers as they plan their career changes?

Put into it what you want to get out of it.

There  are aspects of the curriculum that I dug deep to understand, and  those are the concepts that I still have a solid understanding of. There are certainly other concepts that I rushed through and those are the ones I don’t know as well.

You really do have to take responsibility for your own learning. All the information is there, it’s up to you how much knowledge you walk away with.

Samantha Nelson | Web Developer

What’s the best piece of advice that you received when you switched careers into development?

Practice.

Talk with people who work with the languages you’re interested in learning.

Lean on your friends for support when you don’t understand something, and find  members of the coding community who can help you understand new things.  

One of my biggest struggles was learning javascript. When I got my  developer job I was still a little nervous when it came to using both vanilla JS and jQuery. I talked to our senior developer a lot and made quite a few friends in the coding community online. Being able to talk with multiple people and explain what I wanted to work on really helped me learn the language instead of trying something and failing on my own all  the time (although that helped too!).

Collaborative work really helped me and now I’m very confident with my javascript. I’m working on PHP and React Native as we speak!

What gave you the final push/encouragement to make this career change and enroll?

I had known since my senior year of college that I was going to look into further schooling in coding, because I  realized too late in my under-grad that user experience and web development was what I really loved and wanted to do. At the time I was  working as an AmeriCorps member for a social services program helping  runaway youth, and while I enjoyed what I was doing, I knew coding was my  passion.

I have not regretted the change since. I’m working every day to make awesome usability and aesthetics on websites and I have so much  fun!

What’s  your advice for aspiring female developers as they plan their career changes?

Find women who code!

Literally, join Women Who Code! That and ‘Girl Develop It!’ were both very supportive and  validating groups to be in. The development and coding industries can be very intimidating for women, I think, but we have a really strong support network.

Girl Develop It was a space where I felt completely accepted and I was more eager to socialize and ask questions. I learned a lot from both groups, and I’m starting my own Girls Who Code group in my hometown.

Women  have always been in the tech industries, and I think finding other  like-minded women is very important during a career change like this.  I’m a confident developer, and I feel important every day, because I am!
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