Episodios

  • She Didn’t Switch Paths—She Leveled Up
    Apr 9 2026

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    What does it look like when you combine data, creativity, and purpose into one career?

    In this episode, BGDE founder and CEO Kara Branch sits down with Isabel, a Senior Data Advisor whose journey proves that you don’t have to choose between technical and creative—you can build a career that blends both.

    From studying computer science to working in business intelligence and transitioning into user experience and advisory roles, Isabel shares how she navigated her path with intention, curiosity, and confidence. She breaks down what her role actually looks like day-to-day, how data drives real business decisions, and why storytelling is just as important as technical skill in today’s workforce.

    This conversation is especially powerful for students who feel pulled in multiple directions—those who are both analytical and creative—and are trying to figure out where they fit.

    Isabel reminds us that growth isn’t about starting over—it’s about leveling up.

    🎧 Tune in to learn how to build a career that reflects all of who you are—and why the future of STEM needs both logic and creativity.

    Support the show

    Thank you for listening to Black Girls Do Engineer: The Podcast.

    If this episode resonated with you, share it with a parent, educator, mentor, or young person who needs to hear it.

    🎧 Subscribe, rate, and review—it helps our stories reach more families and future innovators.

    📲 Follow us on social @BlackGirlsDoEngineer for behind-the-scenes moments, upcoming events, and community highlights.


    💖 Support the mission: Your donation helps us create access, confidence, and opportunity in STEM for girls nationwide. Donate at https://bit.ly/Donate2BGDE

    Because this was never just a program—it’s a promise.

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    54 m
  • HR With Heart: Preparing the Future, Not Just Hiring It
    Apr 2 2026

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    What if the future workforce isn’t just hired—but intentionally built?

    In this episode, BGDE founder and CEO Kara Branch sits down with Kalynn Brown, a Human Resources Business Partner, to unpack what HR is really seeing behind the scenes when it comes to talent, skills, and the future of work—especially in STEM.

    Kalynn brings a powerful perspective from the front lines of workforce development, where she partners with leaders and organizations to align people, performance, and long-term strategy. She shares insight into the growing skills gap, what employers are truly looking for beyond resumes, and why early exposure to STEM and real skill-building is critical for the next generation.

    This conversation goes beyond hiring—it’s about preparation, access, and building pipelines that reflect the future we want to see.

    If you’re a parent, educator, or leader thinking about how to prepare students for careers that are evolving in real time, this episode is for you.

    🎧 Tune in for a real conversation about people, purpose, and preparing the future—before it arrives.

    Support the show

    Thank you for listening to Black Girls Do Engineer: The Podcast.

    If this episode resonated with you, share it with a parent, educator, mentor, or young person who needs to hear it.

    🎧 Subscribe, rate, and review—it helps our stories reach more families and future innovators.

    📲 Follow us on social @BlackGirlsDoEngineer for behind-the-scenes moments, upcoming events, and community highlights.


    💖 Support the mission: Your donation helps us create access, confidence, and opportunity in STEM for girls nationwide. Donate at https://bit.ly/Donate2BGDE

    Because this was never just a program—it’s a promise.

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    52 m
  • From Parent to Partner: A BGDE Parent’s Perspective on STEM and Tech
    Mar 26 2026

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    What does it look like when a parent becomes a true partner in their child’s STEM journey?

    In this episode, BGDE founder and CEO Kara Branch sits down with Tiffany, a BGDE parent and leader in digital transformation, learning, and technology, to talk about the real impact of early STEM exposure—from both a professional and personal perspective.

    Tiffany shares how she discovered Black Girls Do Engineer, what stood out about the programming, and how she has seen her child grow in confidence, skills, and curiosity. With her unique lens as both a parent and industry leader, she also breaks down why preparing children early for the future of work—especially in STEM—is no longer optional.

    This conversation is a powerful reminder that when families are informed, engaged, and supported, children are better positioned to thrive in a rapidly changing world.

    In addition to her work in tech and as a BGDE parent, Tiffany is also a new author featured in Femme Led: Hard-Learned Lessons on Leadership, released March 24. She contributes Chapter 13, “The Power of Saying Yes,” where she shares insights on leadership, growth, and opportunity.
    📖 Learn more: https://www.amazon.com/Femme-Led-Hard-Learned-Lessons-Leadership/dp/B0GS197RGS/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0

    🎧 Tune in for a conversation about parenting, preparation, and building pathways for the next generation of STEM leaders.

    Support the show

    Thank you for listening to Black Girls Do Engineer: The Podcast.

    If this episode resonated with you, share it with a parent, educator, mentor, or young person who needs to hear it.

    🎧 Subscribe, rate, and review—it helps our stories reach more families and future innovators.

    📲 Follow us on social @BlackGirlsDoEngineer for behind-the-scenes moments, upcoming events, and community highlights.


    💖 Support the mission: Your donation helps us create access, confidence, and opportunity in STEM for girls nationwide. Donate at https://bit.ly/Donate2BGDE

    Because this was never just a program—it’s a promise.

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    45 m
  • Invest in Their Future Now: Why STEM Training Can’t Wait
    Mar 19 2026

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    The future is not waiting—and neither can we.

    In this episode, Kara Branch breaks down why investing in STEM training for our children is no longer optional, but essential. As technology continues to reshape industries and redefine careers, the gap between those who are prepared and those who are not is growing fast.

    This conversation goes beyond inspiration and gets into the reality: early exposure builds confidence, but consistent training builds readiness. With real data and practical insight, Kara explains why waiting until high school—or even college—is already too late for many students to compete in today’s workforce.

    From the rise of AI and automation to the importance of hands-on learning and skill-building, this episode challenges parents, educators, and communities to think differently about how we prepare the next generation.

    Because here’s the truth: when we invest early, we create access, confidence, and opportunity. When we wait, we risk our children being left behind.

    🎧 Press play and start investing in their future—now.

    Support the show

    Thank you for listening to Black Girls Do Engineer: The Podcast.

    If this episode resonated with you, share it with a parent, educator, mentor, or young person who needs to hear it.

    🎧 Subscribe, rate, and review—it helps our stories reach more families and future innovators.

    📲 Follow us on social @BlackGirlsDoEngineer for behind-the-scenes moments, upcoming events, and community highlights.


    💖 Support the mission: Your donation helps us create access, confidence, and opportunity in STEM for girls nationwide. Donate at https://bit.ly/Donate2BGDE

    Because this was never just a program—it’s a promise.

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    31 m
  • AI Is Here — Are We Ready?
    Feb 19 2026

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    Artificial Intelligence is no longer a trend — it’s infrastructure.

    It’s shaping hiring decisions, automating jobs, influencing classrooms, and redefining entire industries in real time. The question is no longer whether our children will use AI. The real question is whether they will understand it.

    In this episode, Kara Branch breaks down why AI literacy is becoming as foundational as reading and math — and why waiting to prepare is no longer an option. With workforce data, real examples, and clear next steps, this conversation goes beyond hype to focus on readiness.

    Because here’s the truth: if we don’t intentionally prepare our children to understand how AI works — how data is used, how algorithms make decisions, and how bias shows up — we risk being left behind in this workforce shift.

    This episode outlines what families, educators, and communities can do now to ensure our children aren’t just consumers of technology — but creators, builders, and leaders in it.

    AI is here.
    The shift is happening.
    The only question left is: are we ready?

    🎧 Press play and let’s talk about it.

    Support the show

    Thank you for listening to Black Girls Do Engineer: The Podcast.

    If this episode resonated with you, share it with a parent, educator, mentor, or young person who needs to hear it.

    🎧 Subscribe, rate, and review—it helps our stories reach more families and future innovators.

    📲 Follow us on social @BlackGirlsDoEngineer for behind-the-scenes moments, upcoming events, and community highlights.


    💖 Support the mission: Your donation helps us create access, confidence, and opportunity in STEM for girls nationwide. Donate at https://bit.ly/Donate2BGDE

    Because this was never just a program—it’s a promise.

    Más Menos
    24 m
  • College-Ready on Purpose: How BGDE Prepared Me for What’s Next
    Feb 12 2026

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    College readiness doesn’t happen by accident—it’s built with intention.

    In this episode, BGDE founder and CEO Kara Branch sits down with Reagan, a BGDE National STEM Ambassador, longtime member, and high school senior preparing for college. Reagan shares how her journey with Black Girls Do Engineer helped her develop confidence, leadership, and real-world skills that go far beyond the classroom.

    Together, they talk about what it means to be college-ready on purpose—through early exposure to STEM, hands-on learning, mentorship, and belonging to a community that believes in you. Reagan reflects on how BGDE shaped her mindset, strengthened her skills, and prepared her to walk into her next chapter with clarity and confidence.

    This episode is for parents, students, and educators who want to understand what true college readiness looks like—and why preparation, not luck, makes the difference.

    🎧 Press play and hear what it means to be ready for what’s next.

    Support the show

    Thank you for listening to Black Girls Do Engineer: The Podcast.

    If this episode resonated with you, share it with a parent, educator, mentor, or young person who needs to hear it.

    🎧 Subscribe, rate, and review—it helps our stories reach more families and future innovators.

    📲 Follow us on social @BlackGirlsDoEngineer for behind-the-scenes moments, upcoming events, and community highlights.


    💖 Support the mission: Your donation helps us create access, confidence, and opportunity in STEM for girls nationwide. Donate at https://bit.ly/Donate2BGDE

    Because this was never just a program—it’s a promise.

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    53 m
  • Let’s Clear It Up: BGDE in 2026
    Feb 5 2026

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    Today, Kara Branch is answering the questions people ask the most—clearly, honestly, and without the confusion.

    In this episode, Kara breaks down 26 of the most common questions from parents, partners, educators, and community members so there’s no misunderstanding about BGDE’s mission, values, or vision for the future.

    BGDE centers Black girls because the data demands it—but the work is rooted in inclusiveness, equity, and community-wide impact. This episode explains how intentional access, real training, and early preparation are the foundation of strong STEM ecosystems.

    Whether you’re new to Black Girls Do Engineer or you’ve been rocking with the community for years, this episode brings clarity, alignment, and direction as BGDE moves into 2026.

    🎧 Press play and let’s get into the questions shaping Black Girls Do Engineer.

    Support the show

    Thank you for listening to Black Girls Do Engineer: The Podcast.

    If this episode resonated with you, share it with a parent, educator, mentor, or young person who needs to hear it.

    🎧 Subscribe, rate, and review—it helps our stories reach more families and future innovators.

    📲 Follow us on social @BlackGirlsDoEngineer for behind-the-scenes moments, upcoming events, and community highlights.


    💖 Support the mission: Your donation helps us create access, confidence, and opportunity in STEM for girls nationwide. Donate at https://bit.ly/Donate2BGDE

    Because this was never just a program—it’s a promise.

    Más Menos
    30 m
  • Yes, Black Boys Do Engineer Too
    Jan 29 2026

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    STEM conversations often focus on who is missing, but this episode expands the conversation to how we build a future that includes all of our children.

    In this solo episode, BGDE founder and CEO Kara Branch addresses the growing gap facing Black boys in STEM and why early access, representation, and skill-building matter. Drawing from data, lived experience, and years of community work, Kara breaks down where the pipeline breaks, which skills are often missed, and how early disengagement impacts long-term opportunity.

    This episode also introduces Black Boys Do Engineer, a new program designed to support Black boys through hands-on STEM training, exposure to real-world tools, and confidence-building experiences—without competing with or diluting BGDE’s mission to center girls. The program reflects a community-based approach to strengthening the full STEM ecosystem.

    This conversation makes one thing clear: supporting Black boys in STEM does not take away from supporting girls, it strengthens the pipeline our girls will one day lead.

    This episode is for parents, educators, and community leaders who believe in preparation, equity, and building pathways where every child can see themselves as a builder, problem-solver, and future engineer.

    🎧 Tune in for an honest conversation about access, responsibility, and the future of STEM.

    Support the show

    Thank you for listening to Black Girls Do Engineer: The Podcast.

    If this episode resonated with you, share it with a parent, educator, mentor, or young person who needs to hear it.

    🎧 Subscribe, rate, and review—it helps our stories reach more families and future innovators.

    📲 Follow us on social @BlackGirlsDoEngineer for behind-the-scenes moments, upcoming events, and community highlights.


    💖 Support the mission: Your donation helps us create access, confidence, and opportunity in STEM for girls nationwide. Donate at https://bit.ly/Donate2BGDE

    Because this was never just a program—it’s a promise.

    Más Menos
    21 m