Women Leaving I.T.
Deinhard writes "NewsFactor is running a story on the exodus of women from the I.T. field. According to the article, women made up 41% of the I.T workforce in 1996. That number dropped to 35% by 2002 and that "the downward spiral is gaining momentum." While this is certainly a concern, what are the overall effects of such a mass departure?"
Or you could stop calling people geeks for being into computers. You people might have tried to turn it into a compliment because you were bullied with the term all through school, but for real people, the term is an insult.
"Gazeta Wyborcza", it's the Poland's biggest newspaper. Not a tabloid, too.
/. article is related to this proportion.
It was a two-page big article, a couple of months or so ago.
I'm afraid I don't have the paper anymore.
I also didn't intend the grandparent post to be a troll, even though it includes a rather extreme view. A typical woman is not interesting in anything other than clothes and the last soap opera, while the typical man cares about nothing but beer and viewing a mindless football/baseball/etc game on the TV.
I'm not interested in your typical person. People I want to talk to share a mindset -- a mindset that's typical to hackers (in the non-tabloid/MS FUD sense of the word), some scientists (most often in physics) and some related groups. People of this mindset often get labelled "geeks" -- and they are around 0.1% (a completely wild estimation) of the male population and 0.00001% of females. This very
The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
Okay, so i'm the first 'barbie' to reply. I'm a 31 yr old female and i've worked in IT since 1998. As always, i'm in the minority as a chick, varying from 10% to 40% women of the workforce of the company (and the 40% was in a web/graphic design company). Don't forget that career choices are motivated by social stimulus and peer pressure which begin in the perambulator all the way thru educational career. It's still not hot for girls to go for science/technical careers. My dad always told me how good I was in languages. My tests showed that I had a natural affinity for mechanical insight. I ended up studying English lit. and autodidacted my way into IT. This illustrates how girls in general are hence less confident of their abilities. Recent studies actually promote the separate education of girls from boys in computer and science subjects at grade/primary school to counteract this not genetic, but social issue... Because of the growth in specialisms, and different programming languages, girls i reckon "perceive" IT to have become more difficult. And besides, how much fun is it to be the only girl out of a 100 geeks in CS? :)