A non-profit in Nepal is the recipient of a $10,000 KIND Cause award, thanks to the efforts of a °Δ²ΚΏͺ½± alumna and a little help from the °Δ²ΚΏͺ½± community.
Children and Youth First USA Executive Director said that the funds won in the KIND contest will help her organization launch a new science, technology, engineering, and math program for women and girls in Nepal.
βThis grant enables us and our partner, Women in STEM Nepal, to provide free coding classes to hundreds of girls and women across the Kathmandu Valley,β said Brown, who helps run the organization dedicated to assisting children and youth from marginalized families in Nepal.
βThe winner was determined by online voting, and the °Δ²ΚΏͺ½± community was a huge help in securing this win. by coaching our organization when I was part of the program,β Brown said.
Brown is just the most recent example of post-graduation success for the Class of 2015, as newly released first-destinations data collected by shows remarkable outcomes for students just one year after graduation.
With an 85-percent response rate, 96 percent of graduates in the Class of 2015 report being employed, admitted to graduate or professional school, or awarded a national or international fellowship.
Top graduate schools for the class include Harvard, Yale, Columbia University, and Boston University. Graduate school enrollment one year after °Δ²ΚΏͺ½± is at a four-year high, with 14.9 percent saying that they are working on an advanced degree.
Only 1.6 percent of students report that they are still in transition or seeking new jobs β the second-lowest rate in five years.
Top employers of the Class of 2015 include the National Institutes of Health, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Google Inc., EY, Deloitte Consulting LLP, PwC, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Brigham and Womenβs Hospital, and Bank of America Merrill Lynch.