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Women in Science and Engineering

Women in Science and Engineering. Anne K. Camper Associate Professor, Civil Engineering Associate Dean, College of Engineering Montana State University–Bozeman. Inspiration . Ann Ulvin, engineering undergrad Anna Quindlen, Newsweek, Oct. 20, 2003; “Still Needing the F Word”

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Women in Science and Engineering

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  1. Women in Science and Engineering Anne K. Camper Associate Professor, Civil Engineering Associate Dean, College of Engineering Montana State University–Bozeman

  2. Inspiration Ann Ulvin, engineering undergrad Anna Quindlen, Newsweek, Oct. 20, 2003; “Still Needing the F Word” Princeton and Duke studies MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  3. Issues – Duke Study Reading from report, Nannerl O. Keohane, Chair of Committee MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  4. Undergrad Issues – Duke Study Women feel intense pressure to conform to norms of femininity Understate the work they do to achieve academic success Need supportive mentoring – self confidence!! MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  5. Alumni Issues – Duke Study Need for mentoring and role models at University, more female faculty Need to hear about work/life balancing Preparation for entering male-dominated careers MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  6. Grad/Professional Student Issues – Duke Study Confidence decrease greater than for males at this stage Realization that family issues will affect careers, women with larger burden Need for faculty mentoring MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  7. Faculty Issues – Duke Study Not well represented, esp. at Full Professor rank Longer time to tenure (6.3 vs 5 yrs) Child care, partner hires, recognition of extraordinary service MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  8. Employee Issues – Duke Study Again, demands of family vs career Lack of personal and professional respect Professional development opportunities MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  9. Percentage of 4th, 8th, and 12th graders agreeing with the statements “I like mathematics” and “I am good at mathematics,” by sex: 2000

  10. Bachelor’s degrees awarded in S&E and non-S&E fields, by sex: 1990-98

  11. S&E graduate students, by sex: 1990-99

  12. Proportion of S&E graduate students who are women,by field: 1990 and 1999

  13. Master’s degrees awarded in S&E and non-S&E fields, by sex: 1990-98

  14. Doctoral degrees awarded in S&E and non-S&E fields, by sex: 1990-99

  15. Percentage of employed scientists and engineers in S&E occupations, by sex, race/ethnicity, and disability status: 1999

  16. Spouse’s employment status of married scientists and engineers, by sex: 1999

  17. Women in Academia Earn less than male counterparts, gap decreasing Underrepresented at senior ranks more difficult to achieve tenure, promotion especially when young, one study linked with having children (not true for men) MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  18. Women in Academia Publish less frequently, but may be in higher quality journals Tend to take jobs at teaching vs research institutions MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  19. Women Undergrads in Engineering Most undergrads from suburbia, with AP credits Early interest in math, science, technology 40% considered changing majors, mostly in sophomore year MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  20. Women Undergrads in Engineering - Retention Leaving not always grade related Parents critical for encouragement Competition in class – first two years Academic climate (environment, faculty (female) mentors) – most important later on MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  21. Women Undergrads in Engineering - Retention Persistence correlated with self-confidence Importance of support activities – social, study groups, research opportunities MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  22. Women Undergrads in Engineering Self Perceptions Lower confidence than males (understanding concepts, problem solving, commitment to engineering) Work better with people than males Work harder than males on class work MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  23. Women Undergrads in Engineering Self Perceptions Lower confidence than males (understanding concepts, problem solving, commitment to engineering) Work better with people than males Work harder than males on class work MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  24. Faculty at Institutions for Survey Predominantly male, white, tenured, >50 yrs old, 14% Female Advocate recruiting women students, no consensus on support programs Male/female student skills similar, males >laboratory, female > study habits MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  25. Female Faculty at Institutions for Survey Perceived that academic climate favored males, reported more complaints of unfair treatment of females Perceived difficulties in engineering workplace for females MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  26. Female Faculty at Institutions for Survey Personal accounts of gender-specific issues; committees, advisors/mentors for female students, “need to prove themselves as women engineers” MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  27. Other engineering statistics 20% B.S. engineering degrees to females 10% of engineering workforce female MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  28. Important issues in childhood Problem solving related to self confidence Parental expectations, mother’s employment High achieving girls receive less attention in classroom To be a woman must be feminine, to succeed, masculine MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  29. Important issues in jr. high Loss of self confidence, attribute success to luck, not ability Importance of popularity, uncool to be smart Loss of affinity for math, science MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  30. Important issues in high school Believe that they don’t “get” math and science Take fewer classes, less prepared for college Importance of support from family, counselors/teachers, role models MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  31. Important issues in employment Must “prove” themselves – work harder than male coworkers, are excluded from groups Concept of reverse discrimination, perception of preferential treatment Balance of family and career, flexibility, societal perception of working women MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  32. Aspirations of an institution Summary from Duke Survey, relevant to their school Has meaning for entire educational system MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  33. Citations Women, Minorities and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering: 2002. NSF 03-312 (Arlington, VA) http://www.nsf.gov/sbe/srs/nsf03312/start.htm Gender Differences in the Careers of Academic Scientists and Engineers: A Literature Review NSF 03-322, Project Officer, Alan I. Rapoport (Arlington, VA) (“Princeton report”) MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

  34. Citations Women’s Initiative, Duke University. Steering Committee Report, 2003. http://www.duke.edu/doc/Womens_Initiative_Report Where are All the Girls? Why Females Shy Away from Engineering. June 2003. Ann M. Ulvin, Senior Honors Thesis Final Report of the Women’s Experiences in College Engineering (WECE) Project. 2002. Goodman Research Group, Inc. Cambridge, MA MSU Center for Biofilm Engineering

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