The Global Leaders Forum

The Global Leaders Forum will provide the 7C community the opportunity to engage with Kravis Prize Recipients from 2006-2013 in a dialogue about their experiences, stories, and lessons around two frameworks:

Panel 1- Lessons in Youth Leadership and Education
Panelists:
Shailendra Sharma & Anamara Baig (Pratham)
Vicky Colbert (Escuela Nueva)
Johann Olav Koss (Right to Play)
Nickolas Neibauer (INJAZ al-Arab)

Panel 2- Women & Girls: Empowering Voices, Changing Lives
Panelists:
Robin Smalley (Mothers2Mothers)
Hendrina Doroba (F.A.W.E)
Sakena Yacoobi (AIL)
Roy Prosterman (Landesa)

Register Here!
Freeburg Forum (LC-62)
https://docs.google.com/a/students.claremontmckenna.edu/forms/d/1DR1YjaNbApteWNo6NPxmKBKlBZval2soHxvQ7G6fWMQ/viewform

SACNAS Dinner March 13

To all students and professors involved with STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) and Social Sciences

We would like to invite you to a special dinner sponsored by the 5C chapter of SACNAS on Thursday evening, March 13, at 5:30 P.M. The event will be held in the Hampton Room, which is located on the second floor of the Scripps College Malott Commons Dining Hall.

SACNAS “Society for Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science” is a national organization founded in 1973 that now promotes professional development in science for ALL traditionally underrepresented groups. (sacnas.org)

Come meet and talk to students and professors interested in STEM and the Social Sciences (Sociology, Psychology, Anthropology) over dinner and learn more about how you (both students and professors) can be involved in SACNAS.

If you have a Claremont Colleges Meal Plan please RSVP to the event through the following link:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1p2lknO-kMau4V77SiMa33LIhmw8IuSzXYV5Jpbc2LCY/viewform

If you do not have a Claremont Colleges Meal Plan please RSVP to the event through the following link:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1WO_neOPgSWAslRCMZQaHQimxd_HXZXxefLpPxhYpU1I/viewform

Hope to see you there!
SACNAS 2014 Board Members

Statistics & Big Data at Google March 5

WED., MARCH 5
ROSE HILLS THEATRE
POMONA COLLEGE

Google lives on data. Search, Ads, YouTube, Maps, … – they all live on data. I’ll tell some stories about how Google uses data and statistics, how Google is always experimenting to make improvements (yes, this includes your searches), and how Google adapts statistical ideas to do things that have never been done before.

No statistical background is required for this talk. Everyone is invited.

Biography:
Dr. Tim Hesterberg is a Senior Statistician at Google.
He is a tree hugger, teaches kids to shoot rockets and dodge them when they come back down, and has herded cats – I mean chaperoned high school students – to set up computer labs in Guatemala, Ecuador, and Costa Rica.
http://www.timhesterberg.net

Intuit IdeaJam

Intuit_Profile_ImageLast week, our team, the Intuition Coalition (Caroline Hu, Priscilla Wang, Michelle Guan, and Jennie Xu) participated in Intuit IdeaJam!

Intuit is a software company that focuses on financial and tax preparation software for small businesses. To encourage students to take initiative and come up with new ideas, Intuit hosted a competition called IdeaJam on the Claremont Colleges campus. The idea is simple: each team consisting of a maximum of 4 students work together over a time span of 2 weeks to come up with a way to solve for a unique business problem. The prompt varies year to year. This year, the prompt was related to small businesses and network effects. While we did not know what to expect at the competition since none of our team members had participated before, we were excited to represent Scripps as women interested in business and technology.

The Intuition Coalition had a great and fun time putting together a solution for Intuit. We presented our product at IdeaJam with enthusiasm and confidence because we truly believed in our solution.

Some of the tips that we would give to future participants:

  • Ask questions: Intuit will require you to go around the area and interview small businesses.
  • Be confident: In order to convince the judge that your idea is the best, you will have to convince yourself first.
  • Be creative: Think about your business problem from various angles and perspectives.
  • Be open to new ideas: If something is not working, do not be afraid to improve upon your idea or even start over again.
  • Do your research: Look at what the company and its competitors are doing. What is working and what isn’t? What do consumers think?
  • Go all out: Be committed and determined and, as cheesy as it sounds, you will learn and be a winner regardless of the actual outcome!

We hope our experience will encourage you to take part in future business and tech competitions. It was a great learning and team bonding experience. We look forward to seeing you at IdeaJam next year!

– Priscilla Wang and Caroline Hu