Our Story

Our Story

Dear Friends,

I first encountered Techbridge Girls through a hairdryer — literally. During a TBG training for educators, I was introduced to a hands-on activity where we dismantled old hairdryers and rebuilt them to work better. When I shared the experience with my students, they were all in — from taking the dryers apart to testing their work (and yes, fixing their hair afterward!). That exercise captured what I love about Techbridge Girls: our programs center students’ joy, curiosity, and lived experiences. 

Years later, with the opportunity to lead this organization that I’ve long admired, I often feel that same spirit of joyful discovery. And as we mark our 25th anniversary, I’m reflecting on where we’ve been — and where we’re going.

From the start, Techbridge Girls has responded to the challenges of the moment with vision, heart, and purpose. In 2000, our founder Linda Kekelis saw how STEM programs in the Bay Area overlooked the potential of so many girls, so she created opportunities to connect their talent to the emerging tech landscape. In 2016, CEO Nikole Collins-Puri deepened our equity mission, embedding social and emotional learning into all aspects of our work and helping educators recognize and remove hidden barriers.

Today, I see a new challenge: artificial intelligence and data science are reshaping our world at breakneck speed. And as we step into this next chapter, I find myself asking: How do we ensure these technologies reflect the full spectrum of human experience? And how do we prepare students to be not just consumers of this technology, but authors of it? 

From hairdryers to apps to breakthroughs we can’t yet imagine, Techbridge Girls will keep fostering creativity, curiosity, and confidence — equipping young people to lead with purpose and joy.

I’m honored to steward our next 25 years. Thank you for being part of the story we’re writing together.

With gratitude,

Savita Raj
Chief Executive Officer, Techbridge Girls

Techbridge evaluation data and research confirm that visits with trained role models and well supported field trips to worksites can have a significant and lasting impact in influencing girls’ academic choices and career paths.”

Techbridge Girls Timeline

Use the arrow to the right of the timeline to see even more milestones.

The Seed (1980 - 1999)

1980s
Linda Kekelis

Founder Linda Kekelis begins research on how unconscious biases and gender stereotypes affect educational outcomes for young children, particularly those with different abilities.

1996
Chabot Space & Science Center

Linda Kekelis joins Chabot Space & Science Center to manage an NSF-funded youth education program, Females in Real Science and Technology (FIRST), supporting after-school programs for girls in elementary and middle schools in the Oakland Unified School District.

1999
NSF Grant

Chabot Space & Science Center is awarded an NSF planning grant to develop a STEM program for girls.  Partners include Oakland Unified School District; California State University, Hayward; Community Resources for Science; the Lawrence Livermore National Lab; and the Autodesk Foundation. 

The Formative Years (2000 - 2007)

2000
Launch!

Techbridge Girls is launched from The Bay Area.

2002
Training Model

With Google’s help, we developed a training model and resource guide called Get Involved & Make a Difference featuring diverse Role Models: A guide for Classroom Visits and Field Trips for K-12 students.  Our systemic change takes hold.

2000 - 2004
Gender Equity

Techbridge Girls programs, with NSF funding, help to increase gender equity in the Science Center’s programs (including summer programs in engineering and computer science, which typically enrolled mostly boys).

2003 - 2006
Mitsubishi Electric Foundation

Mitsubishi Electric Foundation funds Techbridge programs at the California School for the Blind in Fremont, CA. This program, which started out for girls and eventually went co-ed, introduced students to activities including cow eye dissection, reverse engineering and designing toys for kids with visual impairments, and web design.

2005
S.D. Bechtel Jr. Foundation

Funding from the S.D. Bechtel Jr. Foundation supports summer programs and new curriculum development and piloting. This is the beginning of a lasting partnership.

2006
Summer Insitute

Techbridge Summer Institute launches and provides youth STEM opportunities in the summer. 

2007
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Support from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation helps Techbridge explore business development models for long-term sustainability. TBG programs now support over 6,000 girls in nine school districts in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Building Capacity (2007 - Present)

2007
Support Grows

Techbridge Girls receives support from foundations, including The Gates, Chan Zuckerberg, Simons and Noyce Foundations and corporations like Chevron, Honda, General Motors, PepsiCo, Micron, Applied Materials, and the Golden State Warriors.

2008
Girls Go Techbridge

Girls Go Techbridge in partnership with Girls Scouts of Northern California and, expands to 12 councils and scales to 45, developing STEM kits and out-of-school curriculum innovation for girls

2010
Frontiers in Urban Science Exploration

Our partnership with the Oakland Unified School District begins and long-term data reveals over years that TBG’s integration in out of school time helps grades, confidence, and additional AP classes for participants.

2010-2015
Family Science Guides

Family Science Guides are distributed at AT&T park and in Washington, DC, advocating for the role families play in girls’ STEM education

2011
501c3

Techbridge Girls becomes an independent 501c3 organization.

2012
San Jose Launch

Do you know the way to San Jose? Techbridge expands in California.

2013 - 2018
New State of Affairs

TBG programs launch in Seattle, Washington DC, and several sites in Texas with the help of a National Science Foundation grant.

2014
Linda Kekelis Retires

Techbridge Girls founder Linda Kekelis retires.

2016
2nd CEO

Nikole Collins-Puri becomes the 2nd CEO for TBG.

2017
Partners

TBG adds the San Francisco 49ers football team to its list of partners; TBG girls redesign the team's facemasks.

2018
Inspire™

TBG launches “Inspire” curriculum, an replicable out-of-school time program in classrooms, museums, and community centers for girls and gender-expansive youth in grades 3 - 8, prompting inspiration, STEM skills with innovation, belonging, and creative problem solving built around the Engineering Design Process

2019
EYHN

With the acquisition of the Expanding Your Horizons program, TBG creates a bridge for our girls to explore career opportunities at universities across the country.

2019
Train the Trainer

TBG develops a “Train the trainer” Equipping Educator Framework

2020
20th Anniversary

“Lead Fearlessly” Anniversary Campaign for our 20th year during COVID.

2022
Thriving in 30 States

Once back in person, TBG’s out of school time sites are thriving in more than 30 states.

2022
STEM Equity Learning

Recognizing that systems change begins with educational leaders, TBG launches the STEM Equity Learning Community, funded by the STEM Next Opportunity Fund.

2023
Mission Unstoppable

Miranda Cosgrove shows out for science, capturing an alliance of three Latina women and a big behind-the-scenes episode of Mission Unstoppable, featuring Applied Materials.

2024
New CEO

Savita Raj becomes CEO, becoming just the 3rd leader in Techbridge Girls' long history of impact.

2024
Sue Bird Gift

Basketball legend Sue Bird presents TBG with $25,000 from the Seattle Storm!

2025
Free Throws for Futures

The TBG, PG&E and Golden State Warriors partnership continues through the Free Throws for Futures program, our ninth year of pairing with the team in our home city.

2025
Celebrating 25 years!

We’ve served over 100,000 girls since inception.

2025
Summer 2025

TBG launches its new strategic plan to equip and empower girls and gender-expansive youth to be a part of the AI and Data Science revolution.

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