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Teach girls bravery, not perfection

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    So a few years ago,
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    I did something really brave,
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    or some would say really stupid.
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    I ran for Congress.
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    For years, I had existed
    safely behind the scenes in politics
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    as a fundraiser, as an organizer,
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    but in my heart, I always wanted to run.
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    The sitting congresswoman
    had been in my district since 1992.
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    She had never lost a race,
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    and no one had really even run against her
    in a Democratic primary.
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    But in my mind, this was my way
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    to make a difference,
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    to disrupt the status quo.
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    The polls, however,
    told a very different story.
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    My pollsters told me
    that I was crazy to run,
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    that there was no way that I could win.
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    But I ran anyway, and in 2012,
    I became an upstart
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    in a New York City Congressional race.
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    I swore I was going to win.
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    I had the endorsement
    from the New York Daily News,
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    the Wall Street Journal
    snapped pictures of me on election day,
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    and CNBC called it one of the hottest
    races in the country.
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    I raised money from everyone I knew,
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    including Indian aunties
    that were just so happy
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    an Indian girl was running.
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    But on election day, the polls were right,
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    and I only got 19 percent of the vote,
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    and the same papers that said
    I was a rising political star
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    now said I wasted 1.3 million dollars
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    on 6,321 votes.
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    Don't do the math.
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    It was humiliating.
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    Now, before you get the wrong idea,
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    this is not a talk
    about the importance of failure.
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    Nor is it about leaning in.
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    I tell you the story
    of how I ran for Congress
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    because I was 33 years old
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    and it was the first time
    in my entire life
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    that I had done something
    that was truly brave,
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    where I didn't worry about being perfect.
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    And I'm not alone:
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    so many women I talk to tell me
    that they gravitate towards careers
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    and professions that they know
    they're going to be great in,
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    that they know they're going
    to be perfect in,
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    and it's no wonder why.
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    Most girls are taught
    to avoid risk and failure.
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    We're taught to smile pretty,
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    play it safe, get all A's.
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    Boys, on the other hand,
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    are taught to play rough, swing high,
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    crawl to the top of the monkey bars
    and then just jump off headfirst.
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    And by the time they're adults,
    whether they're negotiating a raise
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    or even asking someone out on a date,
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    they're habituated
    to take risk after risk.
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    They're rewarded for it.
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    It's often said in Silicon Valley,
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    no one even takes you seriously
    unless you've had two failed startups.
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    In other words, we're raising our girls
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    to be perfect,
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    and we're raising our boys to be brave.
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    Some people worry about
    our federal deficit,
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    but I, I worry about our bravery deficit.
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    Our economy, our society,
    we're just losing out
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    because we're not raising
    our girls to be brave.
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    The bravery deficit is why
    women are underrepresented in ???,
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    in C-suites, in boardrooms, in Congress,
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    and pretty much everywhere you look.
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    In the 1980s, psychologist Carol Dweck
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    looked at how bright fifth graders
    handled an assignment
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    that was too difficult for them.
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    She found that bright girls
    were quick to give up.
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    The higher the IQ,
    the more likely they were to give up.
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    Bright boys, on the other hand,
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    found the difficult material
    to be a challenge.
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    They found it energizing.
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    They were more likely
    to redouble their efforts.
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    What's going on?
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    Well, at the fifth grade level,
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    girls routinely outperform boys
    in every subject,
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    including math and science,
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    so it's not a question of ability.
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    The difference is in how boys
    and girls approach a challenge.
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    And it doesn't just end in fifth grade.
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    An HP report found that men
    will apply for a job
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    if they meet only 60 percent
    of the qualifications,
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    but women, women will apply
    only if they meet 100 percent
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    of the qualifications.
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    100 percent.
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    This study is usually invoked
    as evidence that, well,
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    women need a little more confidence.
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    But I think it's evidence that women
    have been socialized
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    to aspire to perfection,
    and they're overly cautious.
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    (Applause)
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    And even when we're ambitious,
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    even when we're leaning in,
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    that socialization of perfection
    has caused us to take less risks
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    in our careers.
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    And so those 600,000 jobs
    that are open right now
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    in computing and tech,
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    women are being left behind,
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    and it means our economy
    is being left behind
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    on all the innovation and problems
    women would solve
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    if they were socialized to be brave
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    instead of socialized to be perfect.
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    (Applause)
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    So in 2012, I started a company
    to teach girls to code,
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    and what I found is that
    by teaching them to code
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    I had socialized them to be brave.
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    Coding, it's an endless process
    of trial and error,
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    of trying to get the right command
    in the right place,
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    with sometimes just a semicolon
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    making the difference
    between success and failure.
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    Code breaks and then it falls apart,
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    and it often takes many, many tries
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    until that magical moment
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    when what you're trying to build
    comes to life.
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    It requires perseverance.
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    It requires imperfection.
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    We immediately see in our program
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    our girls' fear of not getting it right,
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    not being perfect.
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    Every Girls Who Code teacher
    tells me the same story.
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    During the first week,
    when the girls are learning how to code,
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    a student will call her over
    and she'll say,
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    "I don't know what code to write."
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    The teacher will look at her screen,
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    and she'll see a blank text editor.
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    If she didn't know any better,
    she'll think that her student
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    spent the past 20 minutes
    just staring at the screen.
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    But if she presses undo a few times,
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    she'll see that her student wrote code
    and then deleted it.
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    She tried, she came close,
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    but she didn't get it exactly right.
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    Instead of showing
    the progress that she made,
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    she'd rather show nothing at all.
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    Perfection or bust.
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    It turns out that our girls
    are really good at coding,
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    but it's not enough
    just to teach them to code.
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    My friend Lev Brie, who is a professor
    at the University of Columbia
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    and teaches intro to Java
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    tells me about his office hours
    with computer science students.
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    When the guys are struggling
    with an assignment,
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    they'll come in and they'll say,
    "Professor,
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    there's something wrong with my code."
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    The girls will come in and say,
    "Professor,
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    there's something wrong with me."
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    We have to begin to undo
    the socialization of perfection,
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    but we've got to combine it
    with building a sisterhood
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    that lets girls know
    that they are not alone.
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    Because trying harder
    is not going to fix a broken system.
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    I can't tell you how many women tell me,
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    "I'm afraid to raise my hand,
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    I'm afraid to ask a question,
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    because I don't want to be the only one
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    who doesn't understand,
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    the only one who is struggling.
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    When we teach girls to be brave,
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    when we have a supportive network
    cheering them on,
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    they will build incredible things,
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    and I see this every day.
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    Take, for instance,
    two of our high school students
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    who built a game called Tampon Run --
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    yes, Tampon Run --
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    to fight against a menstruation taboo
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    and sexism in gaming.
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    Or the Syrian refugee
    who dared show her love
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    for her new country
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    by building an app to help Americans
    get to the polls.
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    Or a 16 year old girl
    who built an algorithm
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    to help detect whether a cancer
    is benign or malignant
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    in the off chance that she can save
    her daddy's life
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    because he has cancer.
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    These are just three examples
    of thousands,
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    thousands of girls who have been
    socialized to be imperfect,
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    who have learned to keep trying,
    who have learned perseverance.
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    And whether they become coders
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    or the next Hillary Clinton or Beyonce,
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    they will not defer their dreams.
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    And those dreams have never been
    more important for our country.
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    For the American economy,
    for any economy to grow,
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    to truly innovate,
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    we cannot leave behind
    half our population.
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    We have to socialize our girls
    to be comfortable with imperfection,
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    and we've gotta do it now.
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    We cannot wait for them to learn
    how to be brave like I did
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    when I was 33 years old.
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    We have to teach them
    to be brave in schools
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    and early in their careers,
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    when it has the most potential
    to impact their lives
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    and the lives of others,
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    and we have to show them
    that they will be loved and accepted
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    not for being perfect
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    but for being courageous.
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    And so I need each of you
    to tell every young woman you know --
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    your sister, your niece,
    your employee, your colleague --
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    to be comfortable with imperfection,
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    because when we teach
    girls to be imperfect,
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    and we help them leverage it,
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    we will build a movement
    of young women who are brave
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    and who will build a better world
    for themselves
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    and for each and every one of us.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    Chris Anderson: Reshma, thank you.
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    It's such a powerful vision you have.
    You have a vision.
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    Tell me how it's going. How many girls
    are involved now in your program?
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    Reshma Saujani: Yeah. So in 2012,
    we taught 20 girls.
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    This year we'll teach 40,000
    in all 50 states.
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    (Applause)
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    And that number is really powerful,
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    because last year we only graduated
    7,500 women in computer science.
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    Like, the problem is so bad
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    that we can make
    that type of change quickly.
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    CA: And you're working with some of
    the companies in this room even, right,
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    who have welcomed in graduates
    from your program?
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    RS: Yeah, we have about 80 partners
    from Twitter to Facebook
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    to Adobe to IBM to Microsoft
    to Pixar to Disney,
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    I mean, every single company out there.
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    And if you're not signed up,
    I'm going to find you,
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    because we need every single tech company
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    to embed a Girls Who Code
    classroom in their office.
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    CA: And you've heard some stories
    back from some of those companies
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    that when you mix in
    more gender balance
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    in the engineering teams,
    good things happen.
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    RS: Great things happen.
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    I mean, I think that it's crazy to me
    to think about the fact that
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    right now 85 percent of all
    consumer purchases are made by women.
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    Women use social media at a rate
    of 600 percent more than men.
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    We own the Internet,
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    and we should be building
    the companies of tomorrow,
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    and I think when companies
    have diverse teams,
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    and they have incredible women
    that are part of their engineering teams,
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    they build awesome things,
    and we see it every day.
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    CA: Reshma, you saw the reaction there.
    You're doing incredibly important work.
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    This whole community is cheering you on.
    More power to you. Thank you.
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    RS: Thank you. Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Teach girls bravery, not perfection
Speaker:
Reshma Saujani
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
12:39

English subtitles

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