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Meet Luisa Morales

Posted
July 1, 2021

Luisa Morales, an MS in Computer Science student, has cultivated a lengthy list of accomplishments during her time at 麻豆传媒麻豆传媒檚 Seidenberg School of Computer Science and Information Systems. For starters, Luisa has enriched her college experience working as a graduate assistant at Seidenberg. She was also an Engineering Fellow at the Mayor麻豆传媒檚 Office for Economic Opportunity. When an opportunity presents itself to Luisa, she grabs hold of it麻豆传媒攖hat麻豆传媒檚 what keeps her ahead of the curve.

Luisa graduated with a bachelor麻豆传媒檚 degree in economics from 麻豆传媒 in 2011. A few years later, she decided to return to 麻豆传媒 and become a Seidenberg student to do a Master of Science in Computer Science.

She was quickly integrated into the Seidenberg community through a bridge program during her first semester. The bridge program, which is comprised of several introductory classes, is built for students like Luisa who did not study computer science in their undergraduate education. They serve to provide career changers and students looking to try something new with the fundamentals of computing so they can start taking graduate level courses with confidence. In the bridge program, Luisa took Fundamental Computer Science I Using Java, Fundamental Computer Science II Using Java, and Computer Systems and Concepts. As a Pace alumna, Luisa was able to take these courses with a scholarship - something other students may also take advantage of if they are considering a master麻豆传媒檚 at the Seidenberg School.

The deciding factor of becoming a Seidenberg student, though, was the ability to take courses for her master麻豆传媒檚 degree in person.

"Through teaching myself to code, I discovered I learn best by talking through problems with others, repetition, and compound learning. I麻豆传媒檇 tried MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses) when I first started learning to code using Coursera, edX, and CodeAcademy, amongst others. While they麻豆传媒檙e amazing tools, they weren麻豆传媒檛 ideal for me when learning computer science topics because it required a different thinking process than I had at the time,麻豆传媒 Luisa explains. 麻豆传媒淚 would eventually lose momentum, patience, or get sucked into depressive states. Due to this experience, when considering master麻豆传媒檚 programs, I only considered in-person ones."

Her decision to study computer science through the Seidenberg master麻豆传媒檚 program came from her personal recognition of her blind spots when it came to some concepts. This led to what she defined as a lack of common core knowledge in computer science.

"It was holding me back from progressing in my career," Luisa says. "I wanted to understand how the systems I worked on functioned under the hood but was unaware of what I didn麻豆传媒檛 know. As a front-end developer, a lot is obfuscated from you, so it麻豆传媒檚 quick to build something but harder to build efficiently. Debugging is also a huge pain when you don麻豆传媒檛 understand the difference between what you麻豆传媒檙e intending your code do, what it麻豆传媒檚 actually doing, and where to start to find out."

In order to progress in her career, Luisa chose to dive into her interests in backend development. To work to the best of her ability, she wanted to work closer to data so she could find the connection between economics and computer science. While she taught herself as much as she could, it didn麻豆传媒檛 come easily.

"It took a long time for me to accept the validity of what I knew as a developer," she states. 麻豆传媒淪o, deciding to embark on learning backend development felt like an opportunity to give myself the space to learn the core/common computer science concepts I felt I lacked, expose myself to new technology, learn things I wouldn麻豆传媒檛 have exposed myself to otherwise, and get a degree in the process!"

This interest made her extraordinary from the very beginning. So it麻豆传媒檚 no surprise that Luisa earned an internship working as an Engineering Fellow at the Mayor麻豆传媒檚 Office for Economic Opportunity from September 2018 to August 2019. She describes her time there as "amazing."

"It麻豆传媒檚 the first time I麻豆传媒檝e worked in government as an engineer and is the most supportive environment I麻豆传媒檝e been in so far," she says. "Everyone is really kind and driven to learn, experiment, and help others."

Luisa麻豆传媒檚 time at the Mayor麻豆传媒檚 Office broadened her horizons and gave her the chance to work on real programs. She explains that, as a fellow, you have the opportunity to pick a project that aligns with the things you are passionate about.

"I chose to continue a project that another fellow had built a proof of concept for. It麻豆传媒檚 a dashboard that helps our outreach team prioritize the neighborhoods they visit and determine which trainings and events to run," she explains. "With this project, I got the opportunity to decide on the system architecture, build my first REST API, run my first SQL queries, and contribute to open-source [projects]."

While Luisa spent an entire year at the Mayor麻豆传媒檚 Office, she also likes to highlight her time with Women Who Code NYC.

"I started attending events after struggling with the feeling of isolation from learning to code at home and it was hugely refreshing. I started volunteering in 2016, and shortly after became a Lead."

What has helped Luisa further her journey in tech? "Having a community where I can let my guard down and feel like I belong and my voice is heard has been key for me," she states.

Most recently, Luisa attended the Grace Hopper Conference as a Facebook Scholar where she had the opportunity to further explore the technology industry with thousands of other women. As a Facebook Scholar, her expenses麻豆传媒攔oom and board, airfare, meals, and the cost of attendance麻豆传媒攚ere completely paid for.

While she was "nervous but excited" to attend, she recalls that she was "really excited to learn about what other engineers are working on to give me an idea of what I can do."

Now, she麻豆传媒檚 moving on to doing more and better things. We麻豆传媒檙e ecstatic to watch Luisa thrive in this industry and to support her on her journey.

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