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Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Gender & IT Education IT Workforce Project Interview Findings Susan C. Herring with James.

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Presentation on theme: "Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Gender & IT Education IT Workforce Project Interview Findings Susan C. Herring with James."— Presentation transcript:

1 Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Gender & IT Education IT Workforce Project Interview Findings Susan C. Herring with James Marken and Sharon Stoerger

2 Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Interviewees N=168 (F 109, M 59) Round 1: 136 (87 F, 49 M) Round 2: 118 (82 F, 36 M) Round 3: 60 (43 F, 17 M) Demographic profile: UB 18%, UIUC 15%, IU 31%, UM 16%, UW 19% CS 41%, I’matics 11%, IST 11%, LIS 18%, MIS 19% PhD 31%, Masters 35%, UG 35% Caucasian 77%, Asian 18%, AA 2%, Other 2% US 82%, non-US 18% Higher attrition for M, IU, MIS, UG, US Generalizations for students overall and broken down by gender only

3 Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Interviewees Both female and male interviewees presented themselves as successful students (63% v. 65%) overall, and they agreed that success was ‘understanding’ and ‘good grades’ Most were highly (35% v. 39%) or moderately (38% v. 47%) ambitious Most were highly (26% v. 22%) or moderately (23% v. 28%) confident about their employment prospects Most were moderately confident in their skills (48% v. 50%) No gender differences in self-efficacy

4 Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Satisfaction with Program Students' overall experience with their programs was positive in Rounds 1 and 2, less so in Round 3 –Men were somewhat more positive in Rounds 1 (54% v. 64%) and 2 (64% v. 73%) –Men were strongly more positive in Round 3 (33% v. 65%) Most common reasons for F & M dissatisfaction in Round 3 were ‘advisors’ and ‘academic research’ The students' main wish for change was to incorporate more practical experiences and less theory into the curriculum (12% v. 28%) –Some women also wished for better support (16%) and better work-life balance (12%) –Some men also wished for more funding (22%)

5 Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Support Factors More women than men –received mentoring from faculty in past year (86% v. 71%) and got what they needed from it (74% v. 67%) –considered friends important to their satisfaction (79% v. 53%) –credited their personal life for helping to create a good work-life balance (43% v. 27%) –said they has a poor work-life balance (30% v. 17%) More men than women –felt a sense of belonging in their programs (23% v. 41%) –belonged to clubs and organizations (49% v. 71%), including in leadership roles (45% v. 62%) –felt that their personal values matched those of their field (43% v. 61%)

6 Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Computer Use Men and women described using computers equally often (mode: 7-10 hrs/days) and primarily for communication (26% v. 22%) Most know how to program (88% v. 97%) and know the same programming languages Still, men reported –higher levels of computer skill (mode: 4 v. 5) –being more "techie” (very techie: 13% v. 31%) Men and women defined "techie" somewhat differently –women placed greater emphasis on “understanding hardware” (19% v. 10%) and “tinkering” (14% v. 2%) –men placing greater emphasis on “passion/ obsession” (17% v. 23%) and “other” (5% v. 21%)

7 Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Gender Equity Issues Men more than women –had been recruited (17% v. 28%) –thought that both men and women were treated fairly in their programs (34% v. 47%) Women were more likely –to think that women/minorities should be recruited (33% v. 11%) –to be aware of specific recruitment/support activities by their programs –to have participated in such activities (81% v. 57%) Students tended to say that men are advantaged in their IT field (35% v. 31%), and expressed a somewhat dim view of that (41% v. 27%) –But don't call themselves 'feminists’ (40% v. 65%)

8 Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Choice of Study Program Most students selected their major out of interest/enjoyment (52% v. 53%) Men and women described receiving similar gratifications from their IT studies: –creating something useful; making a difference; solving problems; overcoming challenges Women were much more willing to consider CS/MIS (50%) than men were willing to consider LIS/IST (29%) as potential fields of study –For women, the main reason for not choosing CS or MIS was a perceived lack of technical background and skills –Some men commented that LIS and IST were not technical enough

9 Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 What Have We Learned? More similarities than differences between F and M students, but some gender trends Most students generally satisfied; few attributed their problems to gender issues –Seemed comfortable with the gender status quo F and M students have different relationships to the technical aspects of IT –Changing women's understandings about programming could increase the number of women in technical IT fields F students value tech IT fields more than M value applied IT fields –Changing men's (and society's) prejudices toward applied, human-centered IT fields could reduce gendered hierarchies within IT

10 Gender and IT Education Conference, Indiana University, 2007 Gender & IT Education Thank you!


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