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  • Formaat: 102 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Oct-2014
  • Kirjastus: National Academies Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780309305846

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Despite decades of government, university, and employer efforts to close the gender gap in engineering, women make up only 11 percent of practicing engineers in the United States. What factors influence women graduates' decisions to enter the engineering workforce and either to stay in or leave the field as their careers progress? Researchers are both tapping existing data and fielding new surveys to help answer these questions. On April 24, 2013, the National Research Council Committee on Women in Science, Engineering, and Medicine held a workshop to explore emerging research and to discuss career pathways and outcomes for women who have received bachelor's degrees in engineering. Participants included academic researchers and representatives from the Department of Labor, National Science Foundation, and Census Bureau, as well as several engineering professional societies. Career Choices of Female Engineers summarizes the presentations and discussions of the workshop.
1 Introduction
1(1)
2 Career Outcomes Of Women Engineering Bachelor's Degree Recipients
2(6)
Gail Greenfield
3 Stemming the Tide: Why Women Leave Engineering
8(5)
Nadya Fouad
Romila Singh
4 Discussion On Retaining Technical Talent: Data Needs, Critical, Transitions, and Career Pathways
13(5)
5 Technical Women In Small And Medium Businesses
18(4)
Emily Blakemore
Channing Martin
Albery Melo
Sara Raju
Elizabeth Schuelke
6 Closing Discussion
22(2)
APPENDIXES
A Workshop Agenda
24(1)
B List of Participants
25(2)
C Biographies of Speakers
27(3)
D Stemming the Tide: Why Women Engineers Stay in or Leave the Engineering Profession Nadya Fouad, Distinguished Professor and Chair, Department of Educational Psychology, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and Romila Singh, Associate Professor, Sheldon B. Lubar School of Business, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
30(8)
E Women in IT: Recruit Them & Retain Them Emily Blakemore, Angie Im, Channing Martin, Albery, Melo, Sara Raju, and Elizabeth Schuelke, The H. John Heinz III College, Carnegie Mellon University
38(23)
F Presentation slides from Gail Greenfield on "Career Outcomes of Women Engineering Bachelor's Degree Recipients" Gail Greenfield, Senior Program Officer, National Research Council, and Counsel and Principal, Mercer Consulting
61