kb/data/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACM-W-0.md

109 lines
5.8 KiB
Markdown
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

---
title: "ACM-W"
chunk: 1/1
source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACM-W"
category: "reference"
tags: "science, encyclopedia"
date_saved: "2026-05-05T10:32:50.946338+00:00"
instance: "kb-cron"
---
The Association for Computing Machinery's Council on Women in Computing (ACM-W) supports, celebrates, and advocates internationally for the full engagement of women in all aspects of the computing field, providing a wide range of programs and services to ACM members and working in the larger community to advance the contributions of technical women. ACM-W is an active organization with over 36,000 members.
== Celebrations of Women in Computing ==
ACM-W sponsors annual celebrations focused on women in computing. ACM-W provides up to $3,000 seed funding for each celebration, and also raises and disburses corporate sponsorship. Each celebration organizing committee is responsible for additional fundraising within their conference area. ACM-W supports, celebrates, and advocates internationally for the full engagement of women in all aspects of the computing field, providing a wide range of programs and services to Association for Computing Machinery members and working in the larger community to advance the contributions of technical women.
ACM-W Celebrations are regional conferences with global participants from industry, academia, and government. Celebration participation is growing and these events represent some of the largest gatherings of women in technology.
The original Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing was recognized by the US White House on their page "The Untold History of Women in Science and Technology" in the entry for United States Navy Rear Admiral Grace Hopper. In addition to this noteworthy beginning, the conferences have attracted the participation of technology notables including Anita Hill, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative co-founder Priscilla Chan, and Justine Cassell of Carnegie Mellon University, one of the top universities in Computer Science. The list describes the expansion of celebrations globally to include the largest gathering of women in computing in India.
== Chapters ==
ACM-W has nearly 200 active professional, virtual and student chapters globally. The professional chapters serve to enhance communications networks thereby providing resources and support for women in the workforce. The student chapters serve to increase recruitment and retention of women in computing fields at the university level and offer student activities and projects that aim to improve the working and learning environments for women in computing.
== Awards ==
Starting in 2006, ACM-W has offered an annual Athena Lecturer Award to honor outstanding women researchers who have made fundamental contributions to computer science:
20062007: Deborah Estrin of UCLA
20072008: Karen Spärck Jones of University of Cambridge
20082009: Shafi Goldwasser of MIT and the Weitzmann Institute of Science
20092010: Susan J. Eggers of the University of Washington
20102011: Mary Jane Irwin of the Pennsylvania State University
20112012: Judith S. Olson of the University of California, Irvine
20122013: Nancy Lynch of MIT
20132014: Katherine Yelick of LBNL
20142015: Susan Dumais of Microsoft Research
20152016: Jennifer Widom of Stanford University
20162017: Jennifer Rexford of Princeton University
20172018: Lydia Kavraki of Rice University
20182019: Andrea Goldsmith of Princeton University
20192020: Elisa Bertino of Purdue University
20202021: Sarit Kraus of Bar-Ilan University
20212022: Ayanna Howard of Ohio State University
20222023: Éva Tardos of Cornell University
ACM-W also offers an ACM-W Networking Award for active student chapters.
== Scholarships ==
ACM-W provides support for women undergraduate and graduate students in Computer Science and related programs to attend research conferences. The ACM-W scholarships are offered for both intra-continental conference travel, and intercontinental conference travel. Scholarship applications are evaluated in six groups each year, to distribute awards across a range of conferences, including many annual ACM special interest group conferences such as SIGACCESS, SIGACT, SIGAI, SIGARCH, SIGCOMM, SIGCHI, SIGCSE, SIGDA, SIGECOM, SIGEVO, SIGGRAPH, SIGHPC, SIGIR, SIGITE, SIGMM, SIGMOBILE, SIGOPS, SIGPLAN, and SIGSOFT.
== Sponsors ==
Past sponsors of ACM-W services such as scholarships and regional celebrations include:
Google
Microsoft Research
Oracle Academy
Two Sigma
== Newsletter ==
ACM-W publishes a monthly newsletter that highlights people, opportunities, accomplishments, and current issues associated with women in computing. The network wide newsletter was started in 2008 with regional newsletters also provided.
== Officers ==
ACM-W officers include:
Ruth G. Lennon, Chair
Reyyan Ayfer, Vice Chair
Melanie Wu, Treasurer
Amelia Cole, Treasurer
Arati Dixit, Standing Committee Chair
Bushra Anjum, Standing Committee Chair
Bettina Bair, Communications Committee Chair
Sarah McRoberts, Communications Committee Chair
Valerie Barr, Past Chair
ACM-W regions and chairs are:
Rukiye Altin, Europe Chair
Heena Timani, India Chair
Monica McGill, North America
Jacqueline Tate, Asia Pacific
Hong Gao, China
ACM-W Standing Committees and Special Projects include:
Viviana Bono, ACM-W Scholarships
Pamela Wisniewski, ACM / ACM-W Awards Rising Star
Rachelle Hippler, Professional Chapters
Priya Chawla, Next Gen
ACM-W Communications Committee members:
Jennifer Goodall, ACM-W Connections Newsletter Editor
== See also ==
Association for Computing Machinery
CRA-W: Committee on the Status of Women in Computing Research
List of organizations for women in science
National Center for Women & Information Technology
Women in computing
== References ==
== External links ==
Official website
Celebrations of Women in Computing
Women in Computing Oral History Collection
Anita Borg Institute