Visualizing the Gender Gap in Computer Science
Written by Sue Gee   
Wednesday, 18 December 2013

Women earned only 18% of Computer Science degrees in 2012, down from 27% in 2001, and this gender imbalance needs to be rectified in order to meet the looming skills gap in the software industry.

 

A report  published last week to coincide with Computer Science Education Week, reveals the way in which the gender divide in computer science is becoming more extreme. It comes from Change The Equation, a business coalition that aims to mobilize the business community to improve the quality of STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) education in the United States.

With the title Half Empty the report points out:

Men have surged back into computing in the past five years, but women have not recovered from last decade’s slump.

The main findings are summarized in this infographic that has the title Code Red, indicating the importance of taking action to remedy the scenario in which half the nation's population is "untapped" in terms of being a resource for meeting the growing IT skills gap.

 

CTE ComputerScience Infographic

Source: Change The Equation - click to open in new window)

 

At the event hosted by Change the Equation to explore the question "where are the women in computing?" Kimberly Bryant, the founder of the nonprofit group Black Girls Code said:

"There's a social image around what a computer scientist looks like.  The startup culture is very male dominated. Changing that culture and its dynamics is how we can entice girls to become interested."

A great deal is now being done to reverse the message that has prevailed that tells girls and women that computer science is not a suitable choice, but there is still a way to go.

 

changeequicon 

 

 

More Information

Report - Half Empty

Change The Equation

 

Related Articles

A Woman at Google I/O 

No Gender Gap In Satisfaction With Technical Salaries       

Grace Hopper - The Mother of Cobol       

 

To be informed about new articles on I Programmer, install the I Programmer Toolbar, subscribe to the RSS feed, follow us on, Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or Linkedin,  or sign up for our weekly newsletter.

 

espbook

 

Comments




or email your comment to: comments@i-programmer.info

 

Banner


Windows 11 Adoption Takes A Downturn
11/12/2024

With Windows 10 End of Life only ten months away, Microsoft is stepping up its campaign to get Windows users to upgrade to Windows 11. But while Windows 11 had been gaining users at a steady rate at t [ ... ]



AI At edX With 30% Savings
13/12/2024

edX is offering a 30% discount on selected courses and program bundles until December 19th. We look at  AI-related certifications that could boost your resume in 2025.


More News

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 18 December 2013 )