This is the best fit because the event sits at the intersection of culture, capital, education, and leadership that shapes how technology companies are built, staffed, and sustained. It is not product-level or funding news. It is about the operating climate founders, executives, and institutions are navigating right now.
The tech industry is having a quiet identity crisis in public. Language is retreating while decisions harden. DEI slides are disappearing. Budgets are tightening. In 2025, corporate mentions of DEI dropped 72%. Meta dismantled its DEI team and reassigned Maxine Williams after more than 10 years. Google, Salesforce, Microsoft all found ways to say less without admitting why. Innovation keeps demanding difference, yet culture keeps hesitating to name it. That tension is no longer theoretical. It is structural, and it is reshaping the startup ecosystem in real time.
That is why Tuesday, February 24, 2026 carries weight. From 5:00–7:00 PM EST at Math for America on 5th Avenue, doors opening at 4:30 PM, this is not a panel chasing relevance. It is a pause built for people who already feel the pressure. Dr. Telle Whitney, author of Rebooting Tech Culture, sits down with Dr. Maria Klawe, President of Math for America, for a fireside conversation designed for thinking, not signaling. Every attendee leaves with a copy of the book, but the real value is hearing two builders speak plainly about what still works when the vocabulary gets politically radioactive.
Dr. Telle Whitney has seen this cycle before. She co-founded the Grace Hopper Celebration with Anita Borg in 1994 after noticing who was missing from the room. That experiment now draws 30,000+ people. She served as CEO of AnitaB.org for 15 years and co-founded NCWIT. Her work reframes inclusion as an innovation discipline, not a moral sidebar, grounded in 50+ executive interviews and a 1,000-person survey. The 6 Cs are not branding. They are operating conditions for teams expected to build under pressure inside the modern startup ecosystem.
Across from her is Dr. Maria Klawe, who does not deal in abstractions. Her 17 years leading Harvey Mudd College turned cultural intent into measurable outcomes. Before that came Princeton, IBM Research, and the University of British Columbia, followed by board service at Microsoft and Broadcom. Now at Math for America, an institution founded in 2004 by Jim Simons with a $25M pledge, she operates at the seam where education feeds industry. Simons passed in 2024, but his thesis still governs how talent actually enters the market.
This conversation lands differently because of where it happens. Math for America sits between classrooms and companies, educators and operators, theory and execution. No cavernous hall. No performative outrage. Just 2 leaders who have built institutions, survived multiple cycles, and understand how culture compounds over time. If the startup ecosystem is due for a recalibration, it will not come from a memo or a rebrand. It will come from rooms like this, where silence is allowed, words are chosen carefully, and nobody pretends the work is easy.


