Google CEO discusses concerns about black talent pipeline with HBCU leaders

On December 21, ex-Google Diversity Recruiter April Curley tweeted that she was fired by the company in September after repeatedly raising concerns about how the tech chain rates black graduates.

In recent interviews with CNN Business, Curley claims that her former Google superiors believed that HBCU computer science graduates do not have the technical skills necessary for a successful Google tech career and that they regularly oppose her attempts to acquire more technical majors from Black University, although she says the company hired her to do so.

Google has declined to comment on Curley’s specific workplace allegations, made less than a month after the company parted ways with prominent artificial intelligence researcher Timnit Gebru. Both Curley and Gebru are black women. Each of them Twitter threads tell their google experiences went viral in December, sparking outrage in the tech world and questioning Google’s renewed commitment to recruit more Black employees in the aftermath of George Floyd’s murder by police last year.
The national diversity and inclusion organization HBCU 20×20 abruptly canceled his partnership with Google in response to the controversy, which caught the attention of HBCU administrators whose schools have a technical exchange partnership with Google.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai speaks at a conference in Brussels on January 20, 2020.

Friday’s meeting was hosted by Harry Williams, president and CEO of Thurgood Marshall College Fund, whose nonprofit supports government-funded HBCUs and other predominantly black institutions. Williams said the Presidents of Howard University, Florida A&M University, North Carolina A&T University, Prairie View A&M University, and Morgan State University all took part in a 60-minute virtual session Friday night with Pichai and seven members of Google’s senior management team to collaborate. to work. forward.

“We are all encouraged about the future partnership,” Google and HBCU leaders said in a joint statement emailed to CNN late Friday night. “The meeting paved the way for a more substantive partnership in a number of areas, from increased recruitment to capacity building that will expand HBCU’s technical talent pipeline.”

Williams said Gebru and Curley’s allegations about Google were not discussed at the meeting.

“That’s a personnel issue,” he said. “The presidents made it very clear about the students, if they send students (to Google), they should feel good about the situation.”

Prior to the meeting, David Wilson, the president of Morgan State University, organized a focus group with MSU Google tech exchange students and alumni currently working at Google to get their feedback on how the company is dealing with Black HBCU students and graduates.

Wilson said he told Google at Friday’s meeting that what he heard from Morgan State students was mostly positive.

“One of our black women (college students) told me she was the first black woman on her direct team there at Google and one of only two blacks on the larger team,” Wilson told CNN Business. “But she was never made. To feel like she didn’t belong … They have good experiences.”

Allegations of disparagement

A fall 2020 photo of the Howard University campus.  The school 'is one of the historically black colleges and universities participating in a technical exchange program with Google.
Thursday night, Curley tweeted that Google had replaced her on the HBCU recruiting team with a white woman, which led to extra online criticism. Google declined to address Curley’s claim directly.

“We have a large team of recruiters who are working incredibly hard to increase the number of Black + employees and other under-represented talent at Google, including a dedicated team that works together and strengthens our relationships with HBCUs,” the company said.

Curley also accused Google employees of writing a disparaging report on HBCU graduates in 2014, the year she joined the company, according to her LinkedIn account. Curley said she has a copy of the report, which she said was entitled: “Project Bison proposal, “a clear reference to the Howard University mascot.

“Google said,” Our case studies with interview feedback and curriculum analysis show that the current HBCU (computer science) departments do not graduate strong technical talent, “Curley wrote in a series of tweets Thursday evening. CS students grapple with the most basic coding, algorithms and data structures. ”

Google said the Google in Residence program, which sends business software engineers to teach computer science classes on HBCU campuses, started in 2013.

“We have been very candid about the goals of that program and how it is partnering with HBCUs,” a Google spokesperson said via email. “We have no comments on previous proposals.”

Google says it has partnered with HBCUs in multiple ways to prepare black students for competitive software engineer internships and full-time positions with the company, including the company’s technical exchange programs, Howard University’s computer science residency known as Howard West , and the Computer Science Summer Institute program for high school students in the United States and Canada.
Last summer, Google committed to increasing Black’s top-level representation and improving the representation of ‘underrepresented groups’ by 30% by the year 2025. According to the company’s latest diversity report, only 3.7% of Google workforce in the US black. In 2019, Google said it has hired graduates from 19 HBCUs.

“We have expanded our recruitment efforts to more than 800 schools,” the company said.

Curley was interviewed late Friday night and said that Google’s successes in recruiting and hiring at Black College are the result of the work she and others on her team have done over the course of six years. She wasn’t surprised that the Morgan State students had positive things to say about their Google experiences.

“Those kids were my kids that I brought into the business,” said Curley. “(Google can) take the credit for laying the foundation, myself and two other black women.”

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