Tech and Philanthropy
Trish Millines Dziko
Trish Millines Dziko retired from Microsoft, a millionaire at 39, to teach computer skills to minority children. An African American woman who rose from programming to prominence in Puget Sound's largely white male geekocracy, she's been anything but retiring. The nonprofit she founded in 1996, the Technology Access Foundation, has evolved from after-school training in south Seattle to a model for teaching throughout public schools. Her team has partnered with the Federal Way and Tacoma school districts to bring Dziko's version of project-based learning to classrooms. It often begins with an authentic question from students such as, "How do I help my family in a natural disaster?" Math, science, writing and more are then woven into lessons. Dziko wants to export that vision around the state.
Her drive comes from her mother, Pat Millines, who cleaned houses for a living, and insisted her daughter attend college. "You can't get any better of a role model than her," says Dziko, who went to college on a basketball scholarship after her mom died of cancer.
Read more about Trish Millines DzikoMelinda Gates
For years, Melinda Gates was a low-profile partner in the world's richest philanthropy, which has donated more than $45 billion for causes such as vaccinations in developing countries. But in 2012 she wanted the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to improve access to family planning for Asian and African women. As a Catholic, she struggled with the decision, but concluded contraceptives are the "greatest life-saving, poverty-ending, women-empowering innovation ever created."
She announced the foundation would increase its family planning spending to $1 billion by 2020. It was a milestone for Gates in her advocacy for gender equality. She unveiled a $170 million initiative in 2018 to improve economic opportunities for women in India, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. And her 2019 book, subtitled How Empowering Women Changes the World, emphasizes that the U.S. is the only industrialized country without a paid maternity leave law. "It's a better time in the world to be a woman than it has ever been," she told The Chronicle of Philanthropy. "Yet it's not getting better fast enough."