Oreoluwa Lesi | |
---|---|
Nationality | Nigerian |
Known for |
|
Title | Executive director |
Oreoluwa Somolu Lesi is a Nigerian social entrepreneur and UK-trained economist and information technology expert. She is the founder and executive director of Women's Technology Empowerment Centre (W.TEC), a non-profit organisation that empowers women and girls socially and economically through education in Information technology. [1] W.TEC was established in the year 2008. She is a fellow of Ashoka and a recipient of the Anita Borg Institute (ABIE) Change Agent Award. [2]
Lesi's early years were spent in Nigeria. With an electrical engineer father, she fell in love with technology from childhood which led to her developing a software application that was used to run her parents' bookshop. [3] [4]
After her years in high school at Queen's College, Lagos, [1] she studied diploma course in computer programming. [3] She proceeded to United Kingdom where she studied economics and graduated with bachelor's degree in economics from University of Essex. While at university, she set-up a business typing essays and assignments for students and that lit the first spark about how women could use technology to create economic opportunities. [5]
She also obtained, master's degree in analysis, design and management information from London School of Economics and Political Science. She studied Applied Sciences at Harvard University Extension School [2] [6]
Lesi worked with the Education Development Centre, Inc. in the United States as a research assistant and then technology associate. [6] She returned to Nigeria in the year 2005. [7] In Nigeria, she worked with Lonadek Oil and Gas Consultancy where she managed a CSR Initiative-2020 focused on skills development of young people in the area of science and technology. [8] She established W.TEC in the year 2008, when the technology ecosystem was not as vibrant as it has become over the years. [9] There was also very little awareness of the gender gap in technology and why closing it mattered in 2008, which made her work more challenging. [5]
W.TEC now runs several programmes in Lagos, Anambra and Kwara states, including the She Creates Camps and the W.TEC Academy (technology afterschool clubs) [5] [10] and has impacted over 27,000 young women and teachers. [11] More recently, W.TEC launched the Inclusive Technology for All (IT4All) project in partnership with the Children's Developmental Centre. The project introduces technology and the wider STEM concepts to students with developmental disabilities. [12]
Some key highlights of her work with W.TEC include partnering with the Dr. Omobola Johnson-led Federal Ministry of Communication Technology in 2014 to develop a nationwide girls club called Digital Girls Club, which piloted in 12 schools in each geopolitical zone and further scaled to more schools across Nigeria. The Digital Girls Club featured an engaging curriculum, which was hosted on an online portal that teachers could access and use in their respective schools. [5]
Oreoluwa was honoured as fellow of Ashoka in 2013. [3] In 2009, she bagged an Anita Borg Change Agent Award. [2] [13]
W.TEC is frequently recognised for its work as a pioneering organisation in trying to close the gender gap in technology. W.TEC has won awards such as the 2019 EQUALS in Tech award (Skills category) [14] and the 2019 Nigeria Internet Registration Association (NIRA) Presidential Award for Women's Development. [15] W.TEC also emerged as a 2020 WSIS Prizes Champion (Access to Information and Knowledge Category). [16]
In 2019, the inventor of the World Wide Web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee visited W.TEC, as part of a 30-hour tour to 3 cities around the world to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the web. During his visit to W.TEC, he met some of the girls who are participants of W.TEC's programmes. [17] [18] In January 2020, TIME asked a group of six prominent people (including Sir Tim Berners-Lee) to write to a young person or people of their own choosing. Sir Berners-Lee chose to write a letter to the girls of W.TEC in a letter. [19]
Oreoluwa has received many awards and recognitions including:
Oreoluwa has received the following fellowships:
Year | Title | Work | |
---|---|---|---|
2004 | Making the Most of On-line Learning: An Introduction to Learning on the Internet’ | Education Development Center [33] | |
2006 | ‘Telling Our Own Stories: African Women Blogging for Social Change’ | Gender & Development Journal [34] | |
2013 | Radio for Women's Development Examining the Relationship between Access and Impact | Nokoko Institute of African Studies Carleton University Ottawa, Canada) 2013(3) [35] | |
Oyenike Laoye, known professionally as Nikki Laoye, is a Nigerian recording artist, singer, humanitarian, songwriter, dancer and occasional actress, renowned for her musical expressions and stage performances. As a recording artist, Laoye's music has earned her several awards including The Headies Award in 2013 for Best Female Vocal Performance and the All African Music Awards (AFRIMA) in 2014 for Best Female Artiste in African Inspirational Music. She is also well known for the 2006 hit song Never felt this Way before, the 2013 dance single "1-2-3", the soulful ballad "Only You", which she remixed in 2016 featuring Seyi Shay and the love song Onyeuwaoma featuring Banky W.
Uche Pedro is a Nigerian entrepreneur. She is the founder and CEO of BellaNaija, a media tech brand known for entertainment and lifestyle content. Under her leadership, BellaNaija's social footprint has grown through its collective brands - BellaNaija.com, BellaNaija Weddings and BellaNaija Style - to be the largest on the African continent with more than 200 million impressions each month.
OkayAfrica is a digital media platform dedicated to African culture, music and politics. Founded in 2011 by Vanessa Wruble and Ginny Suss as a sister site to The Roots frontman Questlove's Okayplayer, the site has become a popular destination for Africans on the continent and in the diaspora. Today, OkayAfrica is the largest US-based website focusing on new and progressive music, art, politics, and culture from the African continent.
The Women's Technology Empowerment Centre (W.TEC) is a non-profit organization that provides technology education for women and girls in Nigeria. W.TEC offers services and programs including mentoring, training, technology camps, awareness campaigns, collaborative projects, and research and publication in order to empower women.
Unoma Ndili Okorafor is a Nigerian computer scientist and entrepreneur. Okorafor founded Working to Advance African Women, a non-profit that supports the education of African women in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) in 2007. She is the chief executive officer at Herbal Goodness and Fairview Data Technologies. She is the fifth child of Frank Nwachukwu Ndili, the first Nigerian nuclear physicist and the 7th Vice-Chancellor (President) of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka.
Njideka Françoise Harry is a World Economic Forum Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship Fellow.
Abisoye Ajayi-Akinfolarin is a social impact entrepreneur and human development expert.
Maya Horgan Famodu is a Nigerian-American entrepreneur, founder and partner at Ingressive, a firm that provides services for firms and businesses expanding into Africa. She also founded Ingressive Capital, a venture capital fund investing in Africa-based technology companies. She co-founded the High Growth Africa Summit, a conference on launching a successful business in Africa, and founded Tech Meets Entertainment Summit, for African celebrities and tech companies to build revenue-generating partnerships. Maya later co-founded Ingressive for Good, a nonprofit providing scholarships, technical training and talent placement for African youths.
Nkem Okocha is a Nigerian social entrepreneur and activist who founded Mamamoni, a FinTech social enterprise that empowers poor rural and urban slum women with free vocational skills and mobile loans.
ELOY Awards is an award for women excelling in their field of work. It was established by Tewa Onasanya in 2009.
Temilola Balogun known as TaymiB and Temi Balogun Akinmuda is a Nigerian media personality and creator of the TV series Skinny Girl in Transit.
Ire Aderinokun is a Nigerian front end developer and Google developer expert. She is Nigeria's first female Google Developer Expert.
Eyitayo Ogunmola is a Nigerian tech entrepreneur and an international speaker who started Utiva, a global talent development company that has helped over 45,000 Africans learn technology skills and supported major startups and enterprises to hire talents among Africans and Minorities.
Farida Mohammad Kabir is a Nigerian epidemiologist, software developer, and technology entrepreneur. She is the team lead for Google Women TechMakers and co-organizer for Google Developer Group, Abuja. She is also the founder/CEO of OTRAC, a health technology company that develops enterprise software systems for the healthcare sector in Nigeria.
SME100 Africa is a Social Enterprise company located in Ikoyi, a district of Lagos. Founded in 2015 by Charles Odii, it provides a platform empowering young entrepreneurs and small and medium scale enterprise to successfully scale and thrive in Africa.
Osayi Alile is a Nigerian entrepreneur, and human development person. In the course of her work in various roles, she has been active in entrepreneurship, education, youth development, and public leadership. She currently serves as the chief executive officer of the Aspire Coronation Trust Foundation, also known as ACT Foundation, and the co-administrator of CACOVID. Osayi is a member of the African Leadership Network, The Future Awards Africa, and was the CSR Consultant at Access Bank Plc.
NaijaHacks is a hackathon and tech invention competition in Nigerian, which aims to encourage youth to use technology to create solutions for their communities and the world using technologies including blockchain and artificial intelligence. Officially, NaijaHacks is described as an official national "Movement of Makers, Leaders, and Disruptors".
Daniel Etim Effiong, also Daniel Etim-Effiong is a Nigerian Nollywood actor and film director.
Wecyclers is a waste management company in Nigeria that helps low-income communities exchange their recyclable waste which is measured in kilograms for cash and other rewards.
Ized Uanikhehi is a Nigerian marketing professional and former social producer at CNN, Africa Bureau. She is the founder and CEO of Zedi Inc, a marketing tech company and DigiClan, an organization focused on training women in technology to bridge gender imbalance in technology in Africa.
{{cite web}}
: |last1=
has generic name (help){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)