Sage, the leader in accounting, financial, HR, and payroll
technology for small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs), has
announced a new partnership with Morehouse College, the nation’s
only historically Black liberal arts institution dedicated to
educating and developing men. The partnership will expand
Morehouse’s software engineering program, providing students of
color with more opportunities to use and study emerging
technologies and learn first-hand how advancements in the tech
ecosystem are impacting businesses and producing new career paths.
Sage experts will help to design and teach a series of new software
engineering courses at Morehouse, as well as mentor and employ
students as interns. The partnership was launched during an event
at Morehouse College featuring top leaders from both organizations.
The aim of the partnership between Sage and Morehouse is to
develop a more diverse technology industry talent pool that
provides underrepresented communities with increased access to
training and lucrative careers. Sage will also work in partnership
with the Morehouse-based Center for Broadening Participation in
Computing, an academic and industry collaborative dedicated to
making the tech ecosystem a more just, innovative, and equitable
space.
Students at Morehouse College and the Atlanta University Center,
which includes Clark Atlanta University and Spellman University as
members, will be able to enroll in the new Sage-sponsored software
engineering classes starting August 2023.
"We are excited about the opportunity to work with Sage as
partners in the EngageComputing program and appreciate the
company’s $80,000 investment in tech education at Morehouse,” said
Kinnis Gosha, Ph.D., the Hortenius I. Chenault Endowed Professor of
Computer Science and the executive director and chief research
officer of the national Center for Broadening Participation in
Computing. “There is a delta between what is normally taught at a
traditional undergraduate and graduate program and where the
industry is going. The importance of a partnership like the one
Morehouse now has with Sage is it allows us to shrink that delta so
that computer science students are more connected to what is needed
from them. If they never see it, the learning curve gets steeper.
This partnership will help us to bring emerging technologies,
emerging challenges, and emerging opportunities to a diverse group
of students and support them in their education and ability to
compete for jobs.”
Breaking down barriers to diversity in the technology
sectorAccording to a recent study by Kapor Center, a
leading organization focused on addressing racial inequity in the
technology sector, from 2014 to 2021, the tech industry produced
only a 1% increase in Black representation within technical roles
in large tech companies. In addition, despite comprising 13% of the
labor force, Black talent now represents just 4.4% of board roles,
3.7% of those in technical roles, and just 4.0% of those in
executive leadership in the tech sector. The report also noted
Black students continue to be affected by unequal educational
structures, policies, and practices in both traditional higher
education institutions and non-traditional pathways such as tech
bootcamps and apprenticeships.
Sage leaders believe it is imperative to address these
challenges within various higher education institutions, including
four-year colleges, HBCUs, and two-year colleges, to foster a more
diverse talent pool in the technology industry. As part of the
partnership with Morehouse, Sage will support faculty development,
introduce students to career opportunities within the company, and
co-teach two courses in the Fall 2023 Semester and two in the
Spring 2024 Semester. The classes will be offered in-person,
online, and through a hybrid model.
"At Sage, we take pride in our position as a technology leader
in the Atlanta area,” said Aziz Benmalek, President of Sage North
America. “However, we acknowledge the diversity challenges within
our industry and are committed to breaking down barriers that
currently exist. It is crucial for our tech workforce to reflect
the diverse stakeholders we serve, as this leads to more innovative
solutions for our customers and partners. We are honored to partner
with such a prestigious institution as Morehouse College and we’re
eager to support the next generation of tech leaders."
Morehouse College President David A. Thomas, Ph.D., said the
alliance with Sage aligns with the College’s focus on improving
diversity, inclusion, and equity across disciplines and its work to
seek partnerships of purpose with industry leaders. “What we have
decided very intentionally here at Morehouse is while lots of
companies are knocking on our door, we are going to choose wisely
and engage with those companies that are not just here to seek an
employee but are also here to invest in Morehouse to build our
capabilities and enrich our students’ experience. This partnership
with Sage will help Morehouse to continue its legacy of leadership,
innovation, and social justice in the technology industry.”
About SageSage exists to knock down barriers so
everyone can thrive, starting with the millions of small- and
mid-sized businesses served by us, our partners, and accountants.
Customers trust our finance, HR, and payroll software to help
business flow. By digitizing business processes and relationships
with customers, suppliers, employees, banks and governments, our
digital network connects SMBs, removing friction and delivering
insights. Knocking down barriers also means we use our time,
technology, and experience to tackle digital inequality, economic
inequality, and the climate crisis. Learn more at
www.sage.com/en-us/.
About Morehouse CollegeMorehouse College is the
largest men’s college in the United States and the only college
with a mission to educate Black men. A private, liberal arts
institution founded in 1867, Morehouse is the nation's top producer
of Black men who go on to receive doctorates, the top producer of
Rhodes Scholars among HBCUs, and was named to the list of U.S.
institutions that produced the most Fulbright Scholars in
2019-2020. Morehouse has the top-rated core curriculum of any HBCU
nationwide, according to the American Council of Trustees and
Alumni, and Academic Influence named Morehouse one of the two most
influential HBCUs of the 21stcentury. Morehouse is one of the top
five HBCUs nationally, according to U.S. News and World Report,
which also ranked the College among the top 20 liberal arts
colleges nationally in terms of social mobility and the top 50
nationally in terms of innovation. Morehouse is the #1 producer of
Black male graduates in Georgia in biology, business, engineering,
English, foreign languages, history, mathematics, performing arts,
philosophy, physical sciences, religion, and visual arts, according
to Diverse Issues in Higher Education. As the epicenter for thought
leadership on civil rights, Morehouse is committed to helping the
nation address the inequities caused by institutional racism, which
has created social and economic disparities for people of African
descent. Prominent Morehouse alumni include: Martin Luther King
Jr., Nobel Peace Prize Laureate; Dr. David Satcher, former U.S.
Surgeon General; Shelton "Spike" Lee, Academy Award-winning
American filmmaker; Maynard H. Jackson, the first African American
mayor of Atlanta; Jeh Johnson, former U.S. Secretary of Homeland
Security; Louis W. Sullivan, former U.S. Secretary of Health and
Human Services; Bakari Sellers, attorney and CNN political analyst;
Randall Woodfin, elected as the youngest mayor of Birmingham in 120
years; and U.S. Senator Raphael Warnock, Georgia’s first Black U.S.
senator from Georgia. For more information, please visit:
https://morehouse.edu.
Media Contacts
Mara Maddox US Public Relations Manager
mara.maddox@sage.com
Axicom Sageusteam@axicom.com
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