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Women Dropping Out of IT

Women's eNews has an interesting look at women in tech, with numbers showing that women are bailing out of the IT field at a rapid pace. "Technology jobs are predicted to grow at a faster rate than all other jobs in the professional sector, up to 22% over the next decade, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Compensation is also good. In 2008, women in tech made an average salary of $70,370. ... But women's stake in that rosy outlook is questionable. For starters, men's pay during the same time period was $80,357. A study by the National Center for Women and Information Technology ... also finds that women are leaving computer careers in staggering numbers. 'Fifty-six percent of women in technology companies leave their organizations at the mid-level point, 10-20 years in their careers,' said Catherine Ashcraft, the senior research scientist who authored the report. In 2008, women held only 25% of all professional IT-related jobs, down from 36% in 1991, according to the group's report, 'Women in IT: The Facts.'"

2 of 706 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Sexist field by magamiako1 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have never met an IT person nor worked in a place of IT where I can honestly say we have ever put down a woman that works in the field. But keep in mind, there is a difference here. Something so many women seem to forget.

    IT nerds don't have to give you respect *because you're a woman*.

    IT nerds give respect *when you know what you're doing*.

    This is a key difference, because we (used to) have a ton of women in our company in IT that commanded a lot of respect. These smart, knowledgeable, and powerful women left the job not because of the men, but because of the pressures of the job (our DBA left because she was having to get up at 12AM to do database maintenance stuff because of a contracted developer we had).

  2. Family leave sexism *AGAINST MEN* by devloop · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "But there's a nice unexamined assumption in your post: Why the fuck aren't the men taking parental leave or caring for the children?"

    Well, some of us are. At my current position at least 3 top male engineers have taken time off to care for their wives and newborn children.

    This is well regarded and considered a given for women, but there is still palpable prejudice against men doing the same.

    In my particular case, I even got a direct ridiculing, sneering comment from a female co-worker,
    along the lines of "you must be the next winner of the most dedicated father of the year award".

    This kind of sexism against men, specially in highly technical disciplines goes often "unnoticed" by the same
    journalists who relentlessly lament how "poorly" women fare in the workplace.