I've noticed that the large majority of stackoverflow contributors are male. At one former workplace of mine, there were constant lines at the men's john, presumably because the designer of the building didn't realize that staff on the floor would be over 90% male. Google has a diversity program that tries to recruit female engineers, but this has been a tough battle. What do you think can be done to make the field more welcoming to females?
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closed as not programming related by brian d foy Oct 21 '08 at 16:34 |
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Equality in pay and advancement opportunities. But breaking the 'boys only' stigma associated with IT will be your first hurdle. |
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Personal Interest is what makes the difference. Maybe the only thing that'll work is altering the society itself to help girls see it's cool to do "geeky" things. (Research on the topic shows that most girls who have the aptitude end up going into the life sciences instead.) |
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Show girls how cool science and engineering are early enough that they can take the courses needed to apply to university engineering programs. |
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I give you HOWTO encourage women in linux If you think stuff like that doesn't happen, go on Valleywag and do a search for "leah culver." Read the comments. |
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This is a basic, social problem that starts early in the education process. About two years ago I spoke with the president of the college I attended about this subject. He said that they were trying to work with local junior high schools, middle schools, and high schools to encourage women to take math and science classes. He emphasized how impossible it was to recruit women for his school when they had taken the bare minimum of science credits in high school. It is hard to reach women at the entering-freshman level. They may already have a potential career selected at this point. In my various computer science classes it was rare to have more than one or two women in a class of twenty students. But this was because only 1/3 of the students at my engineering college were women, and in the disciplines that required the most math and science, the ratio was much worse. I don't know if I am an average male programmer, but I can say that I would welcome more women in programming and think other males in the profession would agree. The women with which I have worked have been roughly the same caliber as the men with which I have worked. There have been a couple of bad apples, and some truly gifted individuals. Here is an interesting article about getting girls interested in Math and Science early. It really jives with what that college president said, and what I have read elsewhere. I think parents of young girls would do them great service to get them interested in these topics. I cannot imagine the need for qualified engineers and scientists decreasing in the years to come. |
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This is not just about programming but stems from deeply ingrained stereotypes in society. From a young age in high school maths and science are considered more acceptable male subjects and humanities and language more acceptable female subjects. Even among the females who did the maths and science subjects when I was in high school, the majority did so because it enabled them to get into better university courses which often were totally non-science related! I think it just one of the gender stereotypes like dad going to work and mum looking after the kids. Old habits die hard! |
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Hi, I asked a similar question that was closed - http://stackoverflow.com/questions/181202/why-are-there-so-few-women-programmers-closed. I wonder if yours will be closed as well. I really don't know what can be done. My own opinion is that most women just aren't into programming (most find it boring, can you believe it?). So, to encourage women to be programmers is to encourage them to do something that they don't really want to do. In the same vein, one could ask, what can be done to get more men into nursing? It's not that men are kept out of nursing by women (to my knowledge), and it's reasonably well paid, but still most men don't try to become nurses. I spend time on an online forum targeted at owners of antique john deere tractors. Most of the folks on the board are men and spend inordinate amounts of time tinkering with these machines. Guess which sex almost 100% of these people are? It's not an "old boys club" either, these folks help anyone with anything. Men seem to enjoy tinkering with machines more than women do. After all, why should we not expect men and women to have differences other than physical ones? Thanks for opening up another forum for this question, I find it a fascinating one. |
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I would ask: why do you see it as a problem? Equality does not mean equal representation, but equal opportunities. And I believe that IT field is easily accessible for both genders (it's not like jet piloting for girls or runway modeling for boys). People choose their own path and I don't think that most of programmers picked this thing because they thought it was COOL. No! They just liked it. |
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Having the right prerequisites of Math & Science is only part of the issue. I have a female cousin who just graduated with a math BS. She wants to be an Actuarial. Probably more money for less work than being a software engineer. Meanwhile, it's quite possible to be a software engineer without a technical degree (although that helps). I think it's a much about non academic experience and aptitude. It helps to have played with technology of all sorts, building things, figuring out why they broke, etc. In fact, I think troubleshooting is an unrecognized critical skill in software engineering. When I taught software engineering this was a critical indicator of whether a student was going to do well. Many of my students who otherwise performed well could not recover from some sort of error with their code or with the development environment. Face it, a large part of software engineering is fixing bugs. It's one of the few skills that you get to reuse over and over again and applies equally well to Technology 1.0, 2.0, etc. |
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I'll respond to this with another question. Why do you care?It's exactly the same reason why there are more female nurses, make-up artists and secretaries. Why are we calling for female software developers when no bosses are calling for more male secretaries? We already know the reasons (sexism and not within the average female interests), yet we continuously ask why there aren't more hot babes writing our software. At least we now know where the first one is coming from... It's a stupid battle to fight. The majority of us got into this industry because it was what we were interested in. The closest many girls get to wanting to become software engineers is in learning how to make their MySpace pages look pretty. Software Development is probably one of the easiest fields to get into due to the rigorous interview policies. We look for the candidate with the best skills, not necessarily the best CV/Resume, and for a woman the only difference would be one or two fields. It's simply down to sexism and underlying interests. EDIT: So what are the alternatives? Should we be making Software Development more appealing to women? How would we do that in a way that isn't unfairly singling them out? I'll be the first to argue that there is absolutely nothing wrong with women not wanting to become Software Developers. We're not in the 1950's any more! Women are allowed to choose a profession that suits their interests. Now, some will argue that my thinking is ignorant towards women that wish to become Software Developers, but my rebuttal is that, compared to other professions, our barrier to entry solely consists of an interview and a small grilling on knowledge. If a woman is the best candidate for the job then she will most likely get it, because we're looking for the best coders, regardless of their CV/Resume. This is one of the most ridiculous subjects in IT and I believe that arguing over how we can get more women in IT is sheer stupidity. The world is a shitty place and sexism will exist, much like how it can exist between a female boss and a male employee (I can vouch for this). However, I think that we can pride ourselves on a fantastic barrier to entry and as a profession we have little to worry about when it comes to representation. |
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In my experience, women in technology bring a different and unique perspective to technology teams, making them more sustainable and ultimately producing better and more maintainable products. |
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Women aren't usually encouraged to be inquisitive & tinkerers, in my experience. |
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Hiring women programmers just because they're women is bullshit. Sure, if a woman is a better programmer than a male programmer, I'd hire her; but as it's been said, equality means equal opportunity, not representation. |
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The comment about Actuaries is interesting. I'm guessing that there is much higher participation from women in that field than in SWE, and the work is likely just as challenging, if not moreso. My guess is that Actuarial Science has a much cleaner,more mature gestalt. Surely there aren't religious wars there over choice of convention. |
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I think EnderMB's comment:
is a sad indictment of many people's attitude in this field. I know several women ("girls" was patronising term #1) who have technical knowledge above "wanting to make their MySpace pages look pretty". For anyone more comfortable working in a balanced environment (which may include gender, age, race, religion, and any other factors which enrich our society), you might want to consider carefully the exact industry you choose to enter. For example, many web design / development careers exist in a wide range of areas, with varying amounts of 'distance' from traditional software houses. And please don't speak for all of us, we can do that ourselves. That's the idea. |
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The field may be a little broad to change, but a corporate culture could be a start. What kinds of attitudes does your company, your family, and your friends have about software developers? Talking about this and seeing what others say may be a bit of a clue as to culturally what should be done. How valued are technical skills in youth? This is something I don't think gets as much discussion as it should. Athletics, arts and physical beauty are prized and rewarded to a much greater extent than those who would be the next generation of Mathematicians, developers, or engineers, or at least this is my view from a North American where I see sports regularly glamorized, some young people making it big at a young age like child stars which while few I wonder how many wannabes and copycats are there, and then there are beauty pagenants like Miss USA and Miss America for part of the last category I mention. That is just my opinion where I may still be bitter from childhood to some extent. Why is it that a sports movie can make tens of millions of dollars while a movie about a spelling bee struggles to have the same kind of success? Of course there is also the idea of what was in "Mean Girls" which while the film itself is fiction, I do wonder how many people will play dumb in pursuit of social goals and what price do we as a society pay for that. I'm reminded of how in my university there was a 4:1 ratio in genders each way in terms of Arts and Sciences. In Arts it was 4 women to each man and in Sciences it was 4 men to each woman. So, when I took language courses, the gender mix tended to be more female while in my Math and Science courses, it went the other way. |
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