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Thursday, November 7, 2024

Amirah Ricks, a Choctaw HS, Named an Amazon Future Engineer Scholarship Recipient

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Amirah Ricks, a senior at Choctawhatchee High School, is among 250 new Amazon Future Engineer Scholarship Recipients to receive the $40,000 scholarship to study computer science starting this fall and a paid internship opportunity at Amazon after their freshman year of college.

Ricks will receive $40,000 over four years to pursue a degree in computer science at a college of her choice. She is one of 250 students across the country to receive the award along with a paid internship offer at Amazon after her freshman year of college to gain hands-on, practical work experience with mentorship from Amazon leaders. The Amazon Future Engineer program has awarded $22 million in scholarships to 550 students from under-served and historically underrepresented communities across the U.S. since 2019.

Amazon Future Engineer is a childhood-to-career initiative designed to inspire and educate millions of students each year from underrepresented and historically under-served communities to build life-changing skills that leverage computer science and coding to bring their dreams to life.

Recipients were chosen based on a variety of criteria, including their academic achievement, demonstrated leadership, participation in school and community activities, work experience, future goals, and financial need. Amazon partnered with Scholarship America to review the applications and select the 250 scholars.

Amirah Ricks is graduating top of her class and is the president of her school's Environmental Defense Club. In the fall, she will begin her freshman year at Cornell University, majoring in computer science. After graduating from Cornell, she aspires to combine her passion for computer science with her love of the environment in a career that will allow her to make real change in the world.

“Amirah is a polite and conscientious young adult,” says Choctawhatchee High School Principal, Michelle Heck. “Her work ethic is admirable, and she is always striving to grow as a person. Her passion for making the world a better place is evident in her actions every day as president of the Environmental Defense Club. I am grateful to have had the chance to be her computer science teacher and play a small role in her having this fantastic opportunity from Amazon Future Engineers.

Marcus Chambers, Superintendent of Schools in Okaloosa County says, “To earn a scholarship at the caliber of the Amazon Future Engineer Scholarship takes hard work and dedication not only from the student but also from the teachers who inspire them and their support system outside of the classroom- her family and friends. Amirah is deserving of this honor, and I am proud of her! Congratulations!”

Computer science is the fastest-growing profession within the STEM field. The Bureau of Labor Statistics forecasts that job opportunities for computer science workers will grow 13% between 2020 and 2030, yet only 8% of STEM graduates earn a computer science degree, and only a small percentage of those come from under-served and historically underrepresented communities. Additionally, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the median annual wage for computer and information technology occupations was $91,250 in May 2020, which is more than twice the median annual wage for all occupations.

Amazon Future Engineer, Amazon’s global philanthropic computer science education program, aims to bridge the divide between interested students and computer science courses and opportunities. The childhood-to-career education program helps students explore computer science through school curriculum and project-based learning, using code to make music, program robots, and solve problems, and offers teachers professional development opportunities. Amazon launched the Amazon Future Engineer Scholarship program in 2019, awarding 100 students annually with $40,000 scholarships over four years, to pursue an undergraduate degree in computer science and paid internships at Amazon.

Original source can be found here.

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