College Receives Tech Talent Diversity Initiative Grant
July 27, 2022
Housing and Economic Development Secretary Mike Kennealy joined leaders from the tech and innovation sector at Rapid7 in Boston today for the announcement of three new grants from the Commonwealth’s Tech Talent Diversity Initiative, an effort aimed at boosting diversity hiring and training opportunities for diverse candidates. The three grants, totaling $494,947, were awarded to Benjamin Franklin Cummings Institute of Technology, Hack.Diversity in Boston, and Tech Foundry in Springfield.
“We are grateful to the Baker-Polito Administration for this funding that will allow us extend a pathway to opportunity to more students who are looking to study Software Development and stacks toward an Associate’s degree in Computer Technology,”said Aisha Francis, PhD, president & CEO of Benjamin Franklin Cummings Institute of Technology (BFCIT). “BFCIT looks forward to building on our partnerships with LaunchAcademy and MassTLC to deliver this program to students from various backgrounds and preparing them to enter the lucrative IT workforce thus contributing to the Commonwealth’s economy.”
The announcement was hosted by leading cybersecurity firm Rapid7, a corporate partner of Hack.Diversity’s, and featured a roundtable discussion with executives from the three grantees. The roundtable highlighted how the different programs will address the Commonwealth’s commitment to making the tech and innovation workforce more reflective of the demographics in the state by increasing Black, Latinx, and female representation in these careers.
“The Tech Talent Diversity grants are one way our administration is working to improve equity in a key, growing sector, by supporting organizations that are opening doors for new candidates to find employment or to get the training they need to enter a career,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “We look forward to seeing the progress these organizations will make in the future.”
“We’ve committed to increasing the avenues that will allow people to enter the tech field, by investing in our academic programs statewide, by launching new training programs for people already in the workforce, and by supporting new apprenticeship programs,” said Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. “These grants show the need for a broad set of programs to ensure we’re reaching diverse candidates wherever they live in the state.”
The second grant funding round under the Tech Talent Diversity Initiative opened in October 2021 with a request for proposals launched by the Innovation Institute at the MassTech Collaborative. After a review of submissions from organizations statewide, the three grantees were selected for awards, with each grantee focused on a distinct effort to increase the number of individuals from underrepresented or diverse populations who attain internships or entry-level employment opportunities with tech and innovation firms.
The three proposals awarded include:
Benjamin Franklin Cummings Institute of Technology
Geography: Statewide
Award: $122,400
Founded in 1908, Benjamin Franklin is a small private non-profit technical college in Boston with a mission to educate students in advanced technologies that align with the needs of high-demand industries in Greater Boston. The college’s student demographics are diverse (32% Black, 25% White, 25% Hispanic/Latino, 10% Asian; and 8% multi-ethnic or non-disclosed) and nearly 90% of students receive financial aid.
The college primarily serves students and companies from Greater Boston, however their grant-funded program will be delivered virtually, so students statewide can participate. The college will support 14 individuals facing barriers to employment to participate in a certificate program in Computer Technology (CT) with a concentration in Software Development, partnering with three organizations – Launch Academy, MassTLC, and MentorWorks Students will gain “29 college credits that can also be stackable towards an Associate degree in Computer Technology.” Half of the certificate will be delivered through Launch Academy’s bootcamp and half through college courses delivered by the college, with MentorWorks providing access to career services staff and their Talent Accelerator Platform (TAP), and MassTLC opening doors with industry partners that can provide internship and entry-level job opportunities.
Hack.Diversity
Geography: Greater Boston
Award: $300,000
In Hack.Diversity’s first five cycles, they have successfully graduated over 250 fellows who have completed paid internships at more than 50 employers in Massachusetts. Within three months of completing the program, 85% of their graduates will have identified their next step in technology (permanent job, further education, etc.). The organization has developed a network of individual mentors, corporate, and education and training stakeholders that support their efforts to increase the number of individuals from Black and Latinx populations entering the tech sector.
- Increase the number of fellows to 130 annually, up from 100;
- Launch a new Mechanical Engineering track, allowing them to engage new employer partners;
- Hire a Racial, Equity, Diversity, & Inclusion (REDI) director;
- Provide additional support for Fellows by providing stipends to support tech needs;
- Upskilling Support which will allow program alums to tap into scholarships for additional training; and
- Operationalize their ‘Hack.Hub,’ an invitation-only referral network to connect employers and program alumni.
Tech Foundry
Geography: Western Mass
Award: $72,547
Tech Foundry was founded in 2014 by Pioneer Valley tech employers and other workforce, business, education, and economic development stakeholders to address the regional skills gap in Information Technology and drive regional economic growth. The organization offers training programs aimed at filling entry-level IT roles and provides training that is tailored to the needs of partner employers, including a work experience component where students are placed in a position at a local employer.
The grant will be used to assist employer partners ability to host students, primarily in the Pioneer Valley, for hands-on training, by creating a new platform called “Tech Foundry Ventures,” to host two new programs, including:
- Development of a virtual IT technician training environment, working with employer partners to create a tool where students will face similar scenarios to those seen on the job, allowing them to practice the skills they have learned in the classroom without the stakes of serving real-world clients; and
- Launch a service-learning initiative where students will work with community organizations that cannot afford to utilize commercial services, providing similar IT services to those provided by employer partners.
The expanded tools will allow Tech Foundry to train as many as 150 additional students per year, three times its existing number.
The Tech Talent Diversity Initiative was launched in May 2019, managed by the Innovation Institute at the MassTech Collaborative, and the first round of grants were awarded in January 2020. The first round of awards included grants to both Hack.Diversity and Tech Foundry, with the new awards expanding the scope and reach of each program.
“The impact we’ve seen from these grantees has been outstanding, particularly given the impacts from COVID-19 and the move toward virtual programming that we’ve seen over the past several years,” said Pat Larkin, Director of the Innovation Institute at MassTech. “The new grants address areas that are roadblocks to diversity and equity, as they expand virtual learning opportunities, provide financial support for devices, and offer career mentorship, challenges faced by diverse candidates which hinder their ability to get into jobs and to keep progressing in a career.”
Pictured: Group photo includes alumni/Rapid7 employee Jimmy Paul (second from left), Dr. Aisha Francis (4th from left), Corey Thomas, CEO of Rapid 7 (kneeling on right), Secretary Mike Keneally (fourth from right), and other participants at event at Rapid7