Girls Turned Off By "Nerdy" Image Of IT

Published: 19 July 2000 y., Wednesday
Girls and young women in the US are dissuaded from pursuing careers in the high-tech industry by violent electronic games, dull programming classes and the public image of the IT industry as a "nerdy", antisocial world. According to a new study from the American Association of University Women (AAUW), less than 28 percent of computer science graduates in the US are women, down from the 1984 high of 37 percent. Only 9 percent of engineering graduates are women. As a result, only 20 percent of IT professionals are women. The report, 'Tech-Savvy: Educating Girls in the New Computer Age', recommends that educational and recreational software and games should not be gender-specific and should be designed to appeal to a broad range of students and young people. Technology concepts and uses should be incorporated into a wide range of subjects, such as music and history, to capture girls' interest. Girls should also be encouraged to understand and design technological applications, rather than merely use them. This could encourage them to take up careers in IT, thereby helping to combat the skills shortage in the high-tech sector.
Šaltinis: Nua Internet Surveys
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

MEPs back fresh EU money to develop low-carbon technologies

Plans to step up EU funding to develop innovative low-carbon technologies to help cut greenhouse gas emissions by 20% by 2020 were welcomed in a resolution approved by Parliament on Thursday. more »

Higher education reforms: Europe must continue to modernise and increase quality, says Vassiliou

A report presented today by the European Commission shows that countries still face challenges in modernising higher education, a decade after the launch of a blueprint for reform known as the 'Bologna Process'. more »

Nominations for the European Inventor Award 2010

The nominees for the European Inventor Award 2010 include inventors of pioneering innovations in a wide range of fields, from the conservation of drinking water to the synthesis of football-shaped carbon molecules or "fullerenes", and from cancer treatments to digital data encryption. more »

Erasmus: exchanging skills for life

Every year over 180,000 students across Europe study in the Erasmus University exchange programme. more »

Africa’s First Large-Scale Forestry Project Under the Kyoto Protocol

On the margins of the annual Africa Carbon Forum, a new initiative to bring environmental and financial benefits to local communities in the impoverished highlands of Ethiopia was announced here today. more »

“University Business Dialogue” under the spotlight

Graduate unemployment is reaching unprecedented levels, partly due to the economic crisis, but there are other issues at play. more »

Newly Established Agency Will Boost Innovation

A new agency has been launched with a mandate to boost the level of innovation in Lithuania and bring it in line with the European Union average. more »

Ten winners of Danske Bankas scholarships for the 2009–2010 academic year determined

After lots were drawn, ten winners of Danske Bankas scholarships and one winner of an iPod shuffle player were established. more »

European military cadets will study the Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP)

The Spanish Ministry of Defence will offer the military cadets and midshipmen of European Union countries the chance to study an EU course on the Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP) at the Spanish military academies of the three branches of the armed forces as part of the educational exchange programme known as the military ERASMUS. more »

First Solar Cell Factory Opened in Vilnius

The first solar cell production line was opened in Vilnius on 26 January. more »