The mom of four grown children, a first-generation college student who started school after becoming a mom, knows from experience how frightening taking chances can be. But she also knows the payoff.
“It wasn’t until I got on my own and had a family that I saw the value in having an education,” she says. “I couldn’t afford the better things in life, even something as simple as signing my kids up in a sports activity. Everything took money and to make money, you really need a good job.”
She started with one class at Henry Ford Community College and recently finished her doctorate in educational leadership. At Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti, though, she is best known by middle school and high school age southeast Michigan girls as a role model, mentor and champion of Digital Divas and the all-girls high school eSports Team.
Digital Divas started 12 years ago at EMU and Hamed says proudly that it is stronger than ever, with a conference (to be held this November), afterschool programs, video programs to empower girls, the eSports Team and now a TV show she hopes will spur STEM equity across Michigan. She’s always adding something new. A matching program, Digital Dudes, has launched for at-risk boys in resource-poor schools.
Her ultimate goal: To replicate the successful EMU program nationwide.
