Girls and computers, high-tech education

From: edequity@phoenix.edc.org
Date: Wed Apr 12 2000 - 11:52:03 EDT

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    Forwarded by Linda Purrington, Title IX Advocates,
    lpurring@earthlink.net

    Tuesday, 11 April 2000
    Knight-Ridder
    PHILADELPHIA

    A new report says many female students avoid studying computers and shy
    away from technology-related careers.

    A national report from the American Association of University Women,
    scheduled for release today, says female students account for only 17
    percent of the high school students who take the College Board's
    advanced placement exam in computer science to seek college credit.

    In addition, it says, women earn only 28 percent of the bachelor's
    degrees in computer science and make up only 20 percent of information
    technology professionals.

    The report, "Tech-Savvy: Educating Girls in the New Computer Age,"
    contends that the male-dominated computer culture must change in order
    to attract girls and women to technology.

    Unless that happens, the nation's shortage of skilled high-tech workers
    will continue, and women will lose out on opportunities for high-paying,
    high-tech jobs.

    "We are used to hearing about math phobia for girls," said Pamela Haag,
    director of research for the association's Educational Foundation.

    "But the girls are not anxious or phobic about technology. They are
    disinterested in the computer culture. ... Girls are saying, 'We can
    do these things, but we don't want to.' " Sherry Turkle, professor of
    sociology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who co-chaired
    the commission that wrote the report, said girls' criticism of the computer
    culture should be taken seriously.

    Female students said they were turned off by violent software games and
    felt the computer world is dominated by adolescent males.

    Girls said they use computers to communicate and perform specific tasks,
    while boys have underdeveloped social skills and use computers to play
    games and "fool around." Turkle said: "Instead of trying to make girls
    fit into the existing computer culture, the computer culture must become
    more inviting for girls." The report said girls and women cannot settle for
    being consumers of technology. They must be prepared to become designers
    and creators if they are going to fully participate and shape the new
    computer age.

    When asked to describe a person who was really good with computers, they
    described a man. In a 1997 survey of 652 college-bound high school
    students in Silicon Valley, Boston and Austin, Texas, 50 percent of all
    students said the field of computer science was "geared toward men." The
    commission concluded the girls' interest in technology should be
    nurtured from an early age through activities such as after-school computer
    clubs
    because boys get more opportunities to master technology.

    Because girls know little about the range of careers that involve
    technology, they cling to the stereotype that computer careers are
    tedious, unchallenging, anti-social and focused on materialism.



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