Building Chicago's Inclusive Tech Future

Learn more
 

Skilled tech jobs are fast-growing and high-paying. They lift individuals and grow our economy. But companies struggle to fill these roles while Black and Latin people have largely been kept on the sidelines. Chicago has an opportunity: Reduce race-based inequality and accelerate economic growth by diversifying the tech workforce. This is Chicagoland's first effort to understand the full picture of what it will take to make Chicago the most inclusive tech city in the country. This isn't just a company issue or a pipeline problem: there is critical work to do from grammar school to the C-suite.
Now, let’s make it happen!

Why Tech Matters

Tech jobs off the best combination of high wages and growing demand. And tech talent is critical to Chicago's economic vitality over the next 30 years.

Why We Built This

We need a shared source of truth about the leakages in the tech talent pipeline and how policymakers, businesses and educators can most effectively contribute to improvement.

What the Data Shows

We fail Black and Latino Chicagoans at every stage from elementary school to career, providing weak math and science foundations, few opportunities for enrichment and acceleration, inequitable college access, and closed doors at our companies.

What is Success

The ultimate goal is for Chicagoland's tech workforce to reflect the racial, ethnic and gender demographics of the region. For now, we celebrate the collective effort to confront the inequities the data reveals.

Scorecard

The Equity Index score of 0 – 100 measures the gap between how we are serving different racial and ethnic populations on tech career pathways. An Equity Index score of 100 would indicate that we are providing equal access to all groups and serving them equally well. Scores further from 100 indicate our “distance from equity,” with Black and Latino populations receiving less access to opportunity and experiencing worse outcomes. Think of any score below 90 as a major concern.

K-8

Chicago Public Schools
39.5 / 100 Equity Index
0255075100Chicago
Access
55.8
Proficiency
61.6
Excellence
21.3

High School

Chicago Public Schools
32.9 / 100 Equity Index
0255075100Chicago
Access
54.7
Proficiency
45.9
Excellence
8.86

College

Illinois
56.7 / 100 Equity Index
0255075100Chicago
Access
56.2
Proficiency
59.7
Excellence
53.9

Career

Chicago MSA
28.3 / 100 Equity Index
0255075100Chicago
Access
Proficiency
25.6
Excellence
31.0

We believe Access, Proficiency and Excellence are key components of the overall Equity goal. Each component’s Equity score is based on 1 – 4 underlying metrics and uses the same methodology as the overall Equity Index score.

Access

How much access do Black and Latino communities have to the resources and opportunities necessary to succeed on Computer Science pathways?

Proficiency

How well are we preparing Black and Latino students to pursue and succeed on Computer Science pathways?

Excellence

How well are we preparing Black and Latino students to succeed at elite levels on Computer Science pathways?

Black and Latino Chicagoans are dramatically underrepresented in high-paid tech roles after receiving fewer quality learning opportunities in school and college

47% vs 14%

Nearly half the Cook County population is Black or Latino, but those groups get only 14% of the high-skilled tech jobs.

42% vs 22%

Illinois college graduates in computing are 22% Black or Latino despite being 42% of all Illinois high school graduates.

9,000+

We’re failing kids early. Chicago needs to ensure 9,100 more Black and Latino 8th graders meet math proficiency standards to close gaps with other groups… And we need to get 5,500 more Black and Latino 8th graders to advanced standards to close gaps.

5,000+

Access to accelerated opportunities is inequitable: In order to close gaps, Chicago needs to get 5,500 more 8th Black and Latino 8th graders to advanced math standards, and enroll 5,100 more Black and Latino students into AP Computer Science.

What can you do to help?

Every organization can play a role in building a more inclusive TechChicago

Contact Us

Our Contributing Partner

Thoughtworks