How an AI Coding Camp Is Teaching Native Teens to Preserve Lakota Culture

In South Dakota, one summer camp is blending tech and tradition.  

The Lakota AI Code Camp is a three-week program where Native teens learn coding and tech skills to design an app that documents the Lakota language and culture. It is estimated that only 2,200 Lakota first-language speakers remain. 

Sign up for our newsletter! Right Arrow

The camp was co-founded in 2021 by data scientist Mason Grimshaw and researcher Michael Running Wolf, whose work is dedicated to revitalizing native languages using AI and virtual reality.   

Through the program, they hope to inspire students to pursue computer science degrees and be future tech leaders. Native Americans make up less than one percent of leadership roles at tech giants like Apple and Microsoft, according to a study by the Kapor Center and the American Indian Science and Engineering Society.  

At the Lakota camp, students are finding connections and career skills. Former student Tatanka Hahin Zephier helps teach the classes today.  

“This goes for all Indigenous people but being Lakota is a good life but it’s a hard life,” he said. “I wouldn’t be where I am today without the camp and without the mentors.”