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IEEE Committee: Women in Engineering Allan Johnston NPSS Liaison October 25, 2008
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Overall Structure of the WIE within the IEEE The WIE reports directly to the IEEE Executive Committee One of 22 such committees Others include Awards, Fellow, Nominations and Strategic Planning The Executive Committee provides a limited budget for the WIE Committee Supports direct costs of 7 of the 10 voting members Also provides budget for certain activities Limited WIE functions at conferences and local chapters Typically $300 to $600 per function ADCOM has approved a separate path for funding WIE activities, providing up to $500 per conference. This streamlined process is far more effective than working through the WIE for funding. It also allow more flexibility.
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Scopes of Interest Facilitate the development of programs and activities that promote the entry into and retention of women in engineering programs Promote IEEE membership and retention of IEEE women members Enhance the career advancement of women in the profession
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Voting Members of the WIEC 10 voting members (all appointed for 3-year terms, except the student) Seven members appointed by the IEEE Board of Directors, including one student (one-year term) Three one-year appointments from organizational units (EAB, RAB and TAB) Jane Lehr (representing TAB) is a new voting member of the WIE Organizational units must provide funding for travel and other costs of their appointed members The WEIC appoints one member to the IEEE Awards Board Voting member locations 6 from US 2 from Europe (France, Spain) One from Dubai One from Australia
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WEIC Committee Structure WIE Committee 10 voting members Society Liaisons 10 Regional Coordinators Liaisons from: IEEE USA,EXCOM, Publication Services, Standards, and Awards There are also 136 Affinity Groups, located around the world
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Society Liaisons Circuits and Systems Components, Packaging and Manufacturing Technology Laser and Electro-Optic Society Nuclear and Plasma Sciences Oceanic Engineering Power Engineering Reliability Society Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics and Frequency Control Only 8 of the 39 societies appointed liaisons for 2007 – this has increased to 17 in 2008
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Committee Interaction Monthly conference calls (normally one hour) I participated in all the telecons last year, as well as in an orientation telecon in January The June telecon was cancelled (not enough voting members were available This illustrates one of problems in dealing with the WIE: communication is very slow The present plan is to have one face-to-face meeting (2 days) The 2008 meeting was held in April in Anaheim The committee cancelled the March telecon because of the April meeting This cuts out the many members who cannot attend, and also delays voting on funding requests by one month A great deal was accomplished at this meeting I raised several issues regarding liaison activities and establishing better methods for publicizing WIE for working professionals The parent committee is still primarily focused on academia
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Potential Ways to Support the WIE from the NPS Promote WIE membership at conferences The main emphasis of the committee is on recruiting students We have several prominent conferences that provide access to working professionals A single travel display is available that could be shipped to conferences I have prepared a WIE poster that will be available at the 2008 NSREC This can be customized for individual NPSS conferences I need contact information for NPSS conferences that would like this display I would also like to prepare an appointment calendar for 2009 that features women in the NPSS Identify individuals for promotion to Senior and Fellow grades Conference chairs could identify potential candidates from registration information AdCom and Conference Committees could recommend candidates Identify prominent women in NPS as potential speakers for WIE functions
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Membership Trends ~ 2.5% of IEEE members belong to the WIE About 1/3 are male ~2/3 are students Retaining students after graduation is a key problem A slight increase occurred in 2008, but the numbers appear to be near saturation
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Work Discussed in Recent Telecons Small funding requests ($300 to $600) for several conferences Session adopted for E-WEEK Global Marathon A scholarship was implemented to honor a WIE member who was killed in Africa during 2007 The first issue of the WIE Magazine was distributed in Jan. 2008 It contains several interesting articles Distribution was by e-mail, but printed copies will be available for distribution at conferences Shipping costs are a major stumbling block We could underwrite those costs (they are small) for specific conferences The second WIE issue was distributed in June, 2008 It received an APEX Award Unfortunately only limited hard copies are available Articles and content of the monthly newsletter Participation and organization of Affinity Groups
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Feature Articles in the WIE Magazine Iconic Women Battles, breakthroughs, and bridging the gender divide Clementina’s Legacy Imagineering Disney’s kingdom From pets to NASA pilot Meet JPEG’s mom The brain behind video games Vetruvian Machines The charm of Audio-Animatronics Dubai’s engineering oasis From R2-D2 to iRobot entrepeneur Making beautiful electronic music Chemical connection with robots
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Recommendations for NPSS Involvement Our own funds will be used to support to WIE functions at our conferences ($500 was approved) More streamlined process Easier for conference chairman (as well as liaison) $1000 was approved for a reception at the MIC/RTSD Conf. (Dresden) Conference functions must be planned by individual conference committees The WIE chairman needs contact information for NPSS conferences in order to make this happen Encourage distribution of WIE information at the IEEE membership booth at our conferences We could underwrite half of the $25 WIE membership cost for those who sign up at our conferences (only for the first year) Determine if we have potential IEEE Fellow candidates as well as IEEE members who could be elevated to Senior Member status
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Suggestions and Lessons Learned The WIE committee is well established in academia, but not in the broader world of engineering The societies are in a better position to get WIE membership and participation from that segment We need a point of contact for each conference to encourage a WIE-related function A point of contact is needed from the conference, not just through AdCom The WIE liaison should have WIE brochures (and hard copies of the WIE magazine) on hand for distribution to our conferences A poster has been prepared for trial purposes at the 2008 NSREC Similar posters can be made available for other conferences, but I need the information as well as the point of contact The easiest way to ship these is hand carry by the point of contact
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Suggestions and Lessons Learned (cont.) The one-hour monthly telecons are not very effective, given the large number of people involved with the WIE The annual face-to-face meeting is a much better venue The role of society liaisons is only loosely defined They are not within the core group that determines issues within the WIE Setting up periodic telecons (quarterly?) between the society liaisons may be a better way to establish the interaction between liaisons and the parent committee This was discussed at the April face-to-face meeting, but only 4 society liaisons attended NPSS has been more proactive than the other societies, and I am keeping the WIE informed about our conference functions It would be useful to have a list of women who attend the various NPSS sponsored conferences to develop more interest in the WIE It is not possible to get this information from the IEEE I need point of contact for the NPSS conferences in order to proceed
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Summary We had some success last year in working with the WIE WIE sponsorship was obtained for the evening function at the Pulsed Power Conference We learned what the WIE expects when they sponsor an event The $500 “allowance” for WIE activities from AdCom is a better approach It allows us to bypass micromanagement by the WIE, and allows NPSS conferences to count on a basic level of funding WIE literature is available for distribution at our conferences, but they only have one set I have prepared a poster that can be customized for individual conferences, and is inexpensive enough so that it does not need to be returned The WIE communication process is slow and cumbersome, with no specific agenda for society liaisons It takes about 6 months to learn how the WIE functions I attended the face to face meeting in April, and plan to establish a more direct communication channel between society liaisons
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