During the closing ceremony of the World Youth Forum that was held in the Egyptian city of Sharm El-Sheikh recently, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi honored a number of young, influential and inspiring personalities, including Dina Ayman, who works as a program manager at Microsoft International in the United States.
Dina Ayman, 28, is the youngest university professor in the field of computer engineering at the University of New Jersey, and was selected among the list of the thirty most inspiring personalities in the world under the age of thirty in her field.
In exclusive statements to Sky News Arabia, Dina says that she graduated from the Computer Engineering Department at the University of New Jersey and obtained a master’s in this field in the same year, then worked at Intel, before taking the adventure of teaching during the Corona pandemic, as she was the youngest school in the university. Where, at that time, she was only 26 years old.
Dina Ayman was chosen among the 30 most inspiring personalities
Dina Ayman said: “In December 2021, I was selected by Forbes magazine among 30 inspiring personalities in the world under the age of thirty, in the field of computer engineering, as I was nominated by a group of companies such as Microsoft, Google, Facebook, Amazon and Intel, and I was nominated by a group of companies such as Microsoft, Google, Facebook, Amazon and Intel. My liquidation took place in three stages until I was selected among one of these inspirers based on a set of foundations they adopt.”
Private company
Dina adds that: “She has established a private company that works to promote diversity and inclusion in the field of technology, and provides services to global companies and institutions, as it shows companies and institutions how to work on targeting specific categories and sectors to achieve the company’s goals.”
Honoring President Sisi
And about the Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi’s honoring of her, Dina says: “I was very proud and happy to be honored in my country for my work in the United States, and I felt that I represent all Egyptians, especially when the honor comes from President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, as I was the only successful Egyptian to be honored. Abroad, the award was not for me alone, and I also felt that I represented women working in the field of technology, and Egyptian women working in all fields.”
The Egyptians and the scientific field
Regarding the level of knowledge in Egypt, the Director of Programs at Microsoft confirms that: “There are no scientific differences between Egyptians and others. At the World Youth Forum, I met many Egyptian geniuses and got to know them, and they were very distinguished in their field.”
She added: “I do not find anything we lack in Egypt to achieve a breakthrough in the scientific field, especially since when I met Egyptians during the forum, I found that they had produced very impressive scientific research, and this forum was an opportunity to show how Egypt developed, and the development of the field of research in it, we only lack a little in the field Technology, the virtual world, and so on, we don’t need anything to catch up with science.”
Dr. Dina Ayman recently told Sky News Arabia: “I have a very big ambition, and I always have goals that I strive to achieve, but the thing that motivates me most is my love for successfully representing Egyptians abroad.”
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