Arista CEO Jayshree Ullal joined the celebration via Zoom, and chief information officer Lev Gonick praised a partnership that was “more than just a vendor-customer relationship.” Rather, it was two organizations, both at the forefront of innovation, that embraced the eight women as part of the technology community.
“The only place in the world where this would happen is the United States,” Gonick said. “When we’re at our best, people create opportunities for others to join us and succeed.”
Todd Simmons, director of network programs for ASU Enterprise Technology, was the lead trainer of the program and said the combination of desire and ability that the women displayed made them an enjoyable group to teach. In an accelerated model that incorporates 3-5 years of training in a single year, he provided the women with on-the-job training and instruction with what he described as the “world’s fastest growing networking technology.”
Walizada, a sophomore at ASU majoring in computer science with a focus on cybersecurity, has completed Arista Certified Cloud Engineering Levels 1 and 2 and in mid-October will take the rigorous Level 3 certification test, which is the level at which most professional network engineers operate. She said her hope is to one day work full time at Arista, thanks to a deep understanding of connectivity and networking systems and processes.
“This was a big accomplishment and a big achievement,” she said. “I’m so happy and grateful for what we did and what Arista and Enterprise Technology did for us. I know we are ready for the new journey. We learned something that we can use for the future.”
All eight of the women will take the Level 3 certification in the next coming days. Each of them expressed gratitude for the program and for their continuing education at ASU, noting a pathway to a career in technology is not available to them in their home country.
“Women are not able to continue education, they are not able to work (in Afghanistan),” Walizada said. “That is the saddest thing for everyone. We are the people here to change those things. We will be able to change the future for women back in Afghanistan.”