Black Friday Deal: Take $250 off any 2024 workshop with code: BF2024
Cyber Week Savings: Take $2,025 off any bootcamp or short course starting before 3/31
Cyber Week Savings, Extended: Take $2,025 off any bootcamp or short course starting before 3/31
Black Friday Deal: Take £250 off any 2024 workshop with code: BF2024
Cyber Week Savings: Take £2,025 off any bootcamp starting before 31 March
Cyber Week Savings, Extended: Take £2,025 off any bootcamp starting before 31 March
Black Friday Deal: Take $250 off any 2024 workshop with code: BF2024
Cyber Week Savings: Take $1,500 off any bootcamp or short course starting before 31 March
Cyber Week Savings, Extended: Take $1,500 off any bootcamp or short course starting before 31 March
Get ahead of 2025's biggest tech talent shifts. Register for our December 11th webinar.
The U.S. Hispanic/Latino population is complex. Some of us identify as Latinx, Latino/a, Hispanic, Tejano, Nuyorican, Afro-Cuban, Mexican-American, Quisqueyano, Chicana, among many other terms.
According to the Hispanic Alliance for Career Enhancement, our Latinx community represent over 27 countries of origin. Some speak Spanish, some of are immigrants, some are Latinx but not hispanic, some are second and third generations, and do not speak Spanish.. and this intricacy is best understood as intersectionality. Intersectionality is the way all of our multiple identities or diversity dimensions intersect. The consideration of intersectionality allows for awareness in not considering groups singularly but in various classes and as individuals.
This event will be a carrousel of Latinx stories, sharing the perspectives of different members of our community that often hear phrases like: You Don’t Look Latina!, Oh! I didn't think you were [insert nationality], you don't look it, and other experiences of colorism or marginalization within our own communities.