Bhopal (Madhya Pradesh): Madhya Pradesh is among the four states in the country with the lowest digital literacy among women.
The other three are West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, and Bihar, says Jyoti Mishra, a software developer and ambassador of Google’s Women Techmakers Programme.
Congress' Sajjan Singh Verma Slams BJP Over 'No Helmet, No Petrol' Rule: Says Govt Can’t Fix Potholes, Now Telling People To Wear Helmets For Safety In VIDEOJyoti, from Kolkata, was in the city to participate in Google Cloud Community Days Bhopal 2025, GDG Cloud Bhopal, at Minto Hall on Sunday.
On the sidelines of the event, she told The Free Press that in India, internet and mobile phone penetration has grown at a far greater pace than digital literacy, with the result that the country has millions of people with net-enabled smartphones but zero digital literacy.
In this respect, there is at least a 30% gap between women and men. While 78% of Indian men feel that they know enough about the digital world, only 32% of women feel the same. Women also have less access to computers than men. Most girls say that they use their ‘bhaiya ka computer,’ as it is the sons who get laptops first and, if resources permit, the daughters too, Jyoti said.
Indore Mayor Pushyamitra Bhargav Calls For ‘No Helmet, No Liquor’ Rule Amid Ongoing Safety Campaign; WATCH VIDEOSelf-doubt and lack of confidence are mental blocks that stop women from entering the world of IT. “The difference is very apparent in IT companies. While there are a fairly good number of women coders and testers, there are few women at the developer level and almost none at the leadership level,” she said.
She added that, as part of their digital mentorship programme, they teach everything from using UPI to developing websites to young girls studying in schools and colleges. “We also hold a big event once a year on International Women’s Day, in which we ask them to showcase their models and products. Some of them have even managed to develop chatbots,” she said.
Jyoti says that the government is encouraging women in the IT field in its own way. “In hackathons organised in colleges, women-led teams are given priority,” she said.
You may also like
Options Galore: Rakhis, Thalis For Puja On Display At 100+ Shops In MP's Ujjain
'I suffered the hard way after everyone begged me not to have boob job in Turkey'
Peace lilies 'flower like crazy' when watered with one food scrap weekly
Trump threatens takeover of Washington, D.C., with National Guard to fight crime
Madhya Pradesh: EOI To Be Invited For Indore-Bhopal Heli Service