Two articles recently hit home on this topic. The first:
Two engineering professors have published the results of a new study that sheds light on why so few women graduate college with a STEM degree.Very small sample size, to be sure, but it leads into the next article:
Led by Colorado School of Mines professor Greg Rulifson, the study tracked 34 freshmen engineering majors over the course of four years to explore what makes students, especially women, abandon engineering in lieu of other fields.
Of the 21 female students interviewed, fully one-third left engineering by their junior year. Rulifson and his co-author Angela Bielefeldt identified one factor common to all female students who left: the desire to “help society/other people,” or “social responsibility.”
The “social responsibility” definition includes “care for the marginalized and disadvantaged,” “environmental conservation,” and “empathy,” the professors noted.
Of the 21 female students, 14 expressed a strong dedication to social responsibility. Half of those students eventually switched majors upon realizing they wanted to pursue fields they felt had more to do with helping people...
If one accepts that the lack of women in STEM is indeed a problem -- which it may well be -- this latest information shows that the problem was misdiagnosed as being primarily a bias issue, and thus led to failed solutions.
Though their numbers are growing, only 27 percent of all students taking the AP Computer Science exam in the United States are female. The gender gap only grows worse from there: Just 18 percent of American computer-science college degrees go to women. This is in the United States, where many college men proudly describe themselves as “male feminists” and girls are taught they can be anything they want to be.And here's the money shot:
Meanwhile, in Algeria, 41 percent of college graduates in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math—or “STEM,” as it’s known—are female. There, employment discrimination against women is rife and women are often pressured to make amends with their abusive husbands...
So what explains the tendency for nations that have traditionally less gender equality to have more women in science and technology than their gender-progressive counterparts do?
According to a new paper published in Psychological Science by the psychologists Gijsbert Stoet, at Leeds Beckett University, and David Geary, at the University of Missouri, it could have to do with the fact that women in countries with higher gender inequality are simply seeking the clearest possible path to financial freedom. And often, that path leads through STEM professions...
What’s more, the countries that minted the most female college graduates in fields like science, engineering, or math were also some of the least gender-equal countries. They posit that this is because the countries that empower women also empower them, indirectly, to pick whatever career they’d enjoy most and be best at.
The upshot of this research is neither especially feminist nor especially sad: It’s not that gender equality discourages girls from pursuing science. It’s that it allows them not to if they’re not interested.We shouldn't push uninterested people into STEM fields any more than we should push them into any other field. My Job, My Choice.
https://hbr.org/2016/07/how-neutral-layoffs-disproportionately-affect-women-and-minorities
ReplyDeleteThis is what happened to women in my area. IBM CEO wanted his laid off engineering ladies to go into teaching, but the Union rejected that one. College aged gals aren't dumb, they can see the path ahead is filled with H1B visa holders w/hiring pref to the wives of same. They are picking medical, where they won't be tossed out in five years, and can have their own private practice.
The results make sense to me, based on my own history. I am a chemist who has always enjoyed problem solving. It wasn't until fairly recently that I have branched out into more of the social issues doing volunteer work. Even then, it is behind the scenes work rather than with the people themselves.
ReplyDeleteInitiatives to encourage more men to go into teaching are very common. There is also a push to encourage boys to do better in school particularly in reading and writing and to enroll in college at the same rate that girls do. Nobody complains about these things, and I agree that they are a good idea. Why should encouraging girls to take STEM classes be any different from encouraging boys to improve their reading skills and to go to college?
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