Silicon Valley
Open Menu Open Menu
Silicon Valley
  • add addAbout Us
    • add add

      Our Global University System

    • add add

      Enterprise Talent Solutions

    • add add

      Career Opportunities

    • add add

      State Authorization

  • add addCampus
    • add add

      Faculty

    • add add

      Administration and Staff

    • add add

      Research and Innovation Showcase

  • add addStudent Resources
    • add add

      Student Life

    • add add

      Global Learner Support

    • add add

      New Students

    • add add

      Relocating to Silicon Valley

  • add addAcademics
    • add add

      Align Master of Science in Computer Science

    • add add

      Master of Science in Information Systems, Bridge

    • add add

      Master of Professional Studies in Analytics

    • add add

      Master of Science in Computer Science

    • add add

      Master of Science in Data Science

    • add add

      Master of Science in Artificial Intelligence

    • add add

      Master of Science in Information Systems

    • add add

      Master of Science in Project Management

    • add add

      Graduate Certificate in AI Applications

  • add addAdmissions
    • add add

      Events for Prospective Students

    • add add

      Scholarships and Aid

    • add add

      Federal Workers in Career Transition

  • add addNews and Events
  • add addContact Us
  1. News & Events
  2. News

Students build Chrome extension to simplify pronunciation searches

May 1, 2026

By Marcelle Santos
Students build Chrome extension to simplify pronunciation searches

Aisha Abdur Rahim and Yi Zhang built PronunciAid, a Chrome extension that streamlines pronunciation searches on YouGlish

Many language learners look up words on YouGlish to hear how they are spoken in real-world videos. Two graduate students, Aisha Abdur Rahim (MSCS ‘26) and Yi Zhang (MSIS ‘27), have built a Chrome extension that makes those searches faster.

The extension, called PronunciAid, turns a multi-step process — selecting a word, copying it, opening a new tab, navigating to the site, pasting it, and hitting Enter — into a right-click search. 

Users highlight a word, right-click, and select “Search pronunciation on YouGlish” from a context menu. Results appear in a new tab — or in a pop-up window on the same page. The extension supports 24 languages and is available for free on the Chrome Web Store. 

A screenshot of a computer screen. In the background, a word is highlighted. In the foreground, the right-click menu is open and visible is the option "Search pronunciation on YouGlish"

Users can easily search pronunciation from any word in the browser after installing PronunciAid 

The idea for PronunciAid grew out of Yi Zhang’s frustration with switching tabs to check pronunciations. At first, she wasn’t sure the problem was worth solving. A late-night call with fellow graduate student Aisha Abdur Rahim changed her mind.

“It’s not just you,” Rahim told her. “A lot of people need this. We should build it.”

They briefly considered developing the idea at a hackathon. But after brainstorming with a small group of potential teammates, they realized they wanted something different.  

“We didn’t want to build something just to put on our résumés,” Zhang said. “We wanted to solve an actual problem.”

Zhang told the group they were free to use any of the ideas she had shared — except for PronunciAid.

“We’re going to build that one,” she said.

A photo of a reflective copper light fixture hanging from the ceiling in a cafe. Reflected are Yi and Aisha, who are posing for a photo

Yi and Aisha take a break for a photo at their temporary café HQ

They built and shipped the first version in a single week over winter break, completing it at a Joe & The Juice café in San Francisco.

Feedback from classmates — many of them international students — led to a second week of refinements. The update added a pop-up display option and support for languages beyond English.

In total, the project took two weeks — long enough to move from idea to launch, but short enough to feel within reach, Zhang said.

Zhang, whose background is in hotel management, is enrolled in the Master of Science in Information Systems Bridge program, which prepares students from non-technical backgrounds to solve problems through software design. Aside from a photography website she published on GitHub, PronunciAid is the first product she has launched for a broad audience.

“This was my first official baby,” she said.

For Rahim, who studied information technology and worked as an Android engineer before enrolling in the Master of Science in Computer Science, the project meant taking on roles beyond coding. “She did a perfect job with marketing,” Zhang said, noting that it was Rahim who came up with the name PronunciAid and wrote the LinkedIn post that drew their first wave of feedback. 

Since its launch in December, PronunciAid has been downloaded in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Vietnam, and the United States. It has also received several five-star reviews.

The experience gave Zhang and Rahim confidence to keep building. “A small project isn’t actually small if it solves a genuine problem,” Rahim said.

 

Related Stories

  • Small Collab Leads to Big Win at 2026 OpenEnv Hackathon San Francisco May 12, 2026
  • Silicon Valley students get rare look at chip inspection technology in visit to KLA  April 16, 2026
  • Campus iftar event celebrates the meaning of Ramadan across cultures March 20, 2026

Browse by Category

AlumniBay AreaCampus LifeCollege of EngineeringCollege of Professional StudiesD'Amore-McKim School of BusinessEntrepreneurshipExperiential LearningFacultyKhoury CollegePathway to TechResearchSilicon Valley TeamStudent Spotlight