 Allow me to take you six years back when I first entered my introductory computer science class at uni. As my eyes scanned across the lecture theatre, I discovered that my course had very few females in it. To my horror, this got even worse when I stepped into my tutorials and realized I was the only girl there. Did you know that last year only 16% of computer science graduates were female? This is significantly low compared to all other STEM fields where the percentage of females levels somewhere between 30 to 50%. Previous research establishes that the lack of females in computer science might be due to the negative perceptions about the field that label it as being highly male dominated, too technical, irrelevant, and specifically for geeky and antisocial individuals. Today I do not stand here in front of you as an overpowering feminist. No. But as someone who would like to encourage girls to move on from being consumers of technology to becoming actual producers of it. As I've looked into my research, I've realized that females prefer to pick majors that have a positive societal impact or the ability to bring about some sort of a change in the world. So my theory is that if computer science can be portrayed as a more socially relevant and people oriented discipline, more females may find it interesting. Software can be displayed as a tool to solve or mitigate real world problems. So instead of asking students to design a game, they can be asked to create a program which lets them find the shortest route to the nearest Red Cross facility in times of a natural disaster. My research focuses on consulting high school teachers currently teaching digital technologies to include socially relevant content within their classrooms. I hope that my research can benefit teachers who are currently struggling to teach computer science content with additional resources and a source of motivation. Not only this, I aim to help future students, especially females, make wiser career choices when they actually know what computer science is capable of rather than what it has perceived to be. Remember that gender equality is not a woman's issue. It is a human issue. It affects us all. Thank you.