Posted on May 5th, 2020 by NewcombTech
1. CharliMarieTV: Charli - Charli is a graphic and web designer who lives in London. She works as a marketing designer for a remote tech company. She makes videos about design concepts and tools while giving her viewers motivation to uniquely design things for themselves.
2. Alex Dainis - Alex Dainis is a Ph.D. candidate at Stanford University. She has a YouTube channel motivated by her passion for genetics. Her channel consists of interviews with other scientists, simplifications and explanations of theories and mysteries in the science world, and offers a look into what it is like to be a STEM graduate student.
3. msbeautyphile: Trina - This is a YouTube web series focused on demystifying beauty, cosmetics, and personal care products that are used in our everyday lives. Trina answers the questions we all have, ranging from why there is salt in our shampoo to what beauty products will work based on their chemical makeup. She is the solution to the science of beauty products!
4. Draw Curiosity: Inés Dawson - Draw Curiosity is a science-based YouTube channel. The host of Draw Curiosity is Inés Dawson, a Ph.D. student at the University of Oxford. She is currently studying the biomechanics of insects. The videos are a way to teach, while entertaining, about science and language. Her goal is to peak your science curiosity by commenting on present phenomena that sometimes go unnoticed in our everyday lives. She uses biology, chemistry, engineering, mathematics, physics, and psychology to explain concepts in which we are all curious.
5. Simone Giertz - Simone Giertz is a Swedish inventor! This robotics enthusiast has made a name for herself and currently has 2.13 million subscribers on YouTube. She is a go-getter, as shown in her TRUCKLA video, where she transforms a basic Tesla into a pickup truck before Tesla could. She survived a brain tumor and has made her mark around the world known as the “Queen of Shitty Robots”.
6. Coding Blonde: Masha - Coding Blonde is a YouTube channel run by a woman named Masha. She is an entrepreneur, content designer, and teacher who likes to prove stereotypes wrong. The reason for Coding Blonde’s channel is to give women in tech the confidence to thrive in life, without relying on others. Her channel consists of inspiration, advice for current and future gender minorities in STEM, posts on her personal development, and solidarity from a group of women subscribers who are facing similar challenges to Masha.
7. Girl Knows Tech: Marie-Philippe - Marie-Philippe is a software engineering student who lives in Montreal, Canada. She has a blog called Girl Knows Tech, in which she is very active. She is a native French speaker, but her videos and blog posts are in English. She created this channel because she wanted to inspire other females to get into STEM and tech. She knows many women are scared of math and men and wants to show people that women can also be powerful and respected in the tech world! Marie feels that if something cannot be simply explained, then the teacher does not know it well enough, which is why she wants to make her viewers experts.
8. blondiebytes: Kathryn Hodge - Kathryn Hodge runs the YouTube channel bloniebytes. Her goal is to provide technical programming tutorials for people wanting to learn how to code. Kathryn currently works with Comcast NBCUniversal as a Software Developer in the MediaTech program, but still has time to upload videos and challenges to her YouTube page. She has created several courses, including her 30 Days of Code initiative with the startup HackRank, bringing over 5 million submissions to their site.
9. Physics Girl: Dianna Cowern - Dianna Cowern is the host of her YouTube Channel “Physics Girl,” part of PBS Digital Studios. Her channel works on uncovering many physical phenomena, digging into physical sciences with experiments and demonstrations, leading to new discoveries. Dianna has a passion for teaching and inspiring science and education for girls and minorities. With more than 1.3 million subscribers, she earned a position on Forbes 30 under 30.
10. Vihart – Victoria Hart - Victoria Hart is a self-described “recreational mathemusician” who is well known for creating mathematical videos. Hart founded the virtual reality research group eleVIR and has co-authored several research papers on computational geometry and the mathematics of paper.