Microsoft Expands YouthSpark Initiative
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
 - 09/11/14
 
		
        Joshua Uwadiae was a high school dropout in Hackney, an  inner city neighborhood of London, when he found his way into an apprenticeship  program run by the United  Kingdom's Department of Business Innovation and Skills and sponsored by  Microsoft. "Handy with computers," Uwadiae learned IT skills and  networking in the apprenticeship program, eventually being named  "apprentice of the year" and getting hired as an IT support analyst.  Recently, he was promoted to IT manager at his company.
"Who I was became different," he stated in a  video explaining his journey from a youth spent dabbling in gang activities  to the professional he is today. Now Uwadiae serves as an "apprentice  ambassador" for the same program to help other young people pursue careers  in technology.
Those are the kinds of outcomes Microsoft is hoping for in  its third year of YouthSpark, a worldwide initiative to help 300 million young  people gain technical skills and education that can help them find jobs.  YouthSpark started two years ago, and in that time, the company stated, the  program has "created opportunities" for 227 million people in 100  countries.
As the new school year begins in the United States,  Microsoft announced that it would be nearly doubling down on its Technology  Education and Literacy in Schools (TEALS) program. TEALS places software  engineers as volunteer computer science coaches in high schools. Last year the  program worked with 70 schools; this year that's growing to 131 schools. The  engineers help train teachers in coding practices and work alongside them in  developing computer science programs.
The company has also announced the start of Imagine Cup 2015, its global technology  contest for students 16 and older. This annual event allows individual or teams  of students to compete in one of several challenges. The world  citizenship competition, for example, asks students to develop projects for  addressing an "important social problem," such as disease, poverty or  gender equality. A new "code hunt challenge" allows students to  rewrite programs provided to them to produce the desired output in as few lines  of code as possible; the coding puzzles get harder as the student progresses  through them.
In each type of challenge, participants can win money and  other perks. The two members of the 2014 Imagine Cup winning team, Eyenaemia  from Australia, are in Seattle this week for a private meeting with Bill Gates  and a week of visiting with Microsoft engineers, product managers and others.  Their project: a simple, non-invasive app that screens for the risk of anemia  through a selfie.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.