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Women's Enrollment In Computer Science Correlates Negatively With Net Access

New submitter MoriT sends this excerpt from a post examining the correlation between women's enrollment in computer science programs at college and their access to the internet. "There is currently a responsibility-dodging contest between industry and academia over who is to blame for the declining enrollment of women in Computer Science and declining employment of women in software development. I hear people in industry bemoan the 'empty pipeline,' while academics maintain that women aren't entering their programs because of perceptions of the industry. I have compiled some data that may help resolve the question by highlighting a third factor common to both: access to an Internet-based culture of computing. ... I conclude that in the last 10 years among many Northern European nations, rising Internet access is correlated with falling interest in computer science relative to other professions among women. The group of Mediterranean nations that show a positive correlation should be a fruitful area for future research, but seem outliers from the Northern cohort."

26 of 314 comments (clear)

  1. Correlation/Causation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We can't confuse correlation with causation. While this might be a third factor, what other factors may be involved?

    1. Re:Correlation/Causation? by DurendalMac · · Score: 5, Funny

      Putting up with creepy neckbeards in the CS major? I've certainly seen it with the scant few women that were CS majors at my school.

    2. Re:Correlation/Causation? by Tanktalus · · Score: 4, Funny

      scant [...] women

      Pics or it didn't happen!

      Oh crap, I think I just proved the point. :-P

    3. Re:Correlation/Causation? by Tsingi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As soon as I got hold of something I could program my career was set. I don't see what the fuss is about, women rarely (never as far as I know) catch the bug that men do when they discover that they are natural hackers. It's the way it is, men and women are different. Sue me, it's true.

    4. Re:Correlation/Causation? by geekoid · · Score: 5, Interesting

      My experience with my daughter and her girl scout friends is that once the get to middle school, a lot of pressure is put on them not to like math. From TV, to parents, to other kids.

      Now, I don't stand for that nonsense, and my daughter(11) is learning algebra through summer.

      Yes, I am a mean dad that has actual summer goals for his kids. Fear not trolls*, it's only an hour a day in the mornings for math and Spanish, and an hour for electronics in the evening.
      My kids have plenty of time to goof off; which is important. And frankly there more you know about science, math and electronics, the more interesting their goof off time is anyways.

      *Not necessarily the person I am replying, to, but to a bunch of people who don't have kids but a wealth of stupid advice.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:Correlation/Causation? by Gilmoure · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yup, my daughter's (11 yr old) also into Lego robotics and starting middle school next year. She's learning welding, helping to tear down a big block Chevy, and video editing this summer. She already has the "I'm a geek and don't care what you think" attitude so hopefully, will stay on her current tech/science track.

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    6. Re:Correlation/Causation? by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There's some other problems: there's a bunch of other fields that men are dominant in, yet we don't see much push to get more women into those fields:
      - construction
      - truck driving
      - plumbing
      - auto mechanics
      - air conditioning service
      - roofing

      Why is there all this effort to push women into computer fields, but not these other fields? Why aren't people pushing little girls to get excited by a career where they unclog toilets and crawl around in shit? Why aren't people pushing girls to get excited about crawling on top of a hot roof in the middle of the summer and fix an A/C unit without falling off and dying?

      The message here seems to be that it's OK for men to dominate really crappy and dangerous jobs that not that many people actually want to do, and only do because they have little choice, but for all the "good" jobs, we need to make sure there's equal numbers of men and women.

      Similarly, there's no push to get equal numbers of men into female dominated jobs:
      - nursing
      - elementary school or kindergarten teachers

      In fact, if any men try to get into that latter profession, they're deemed a pervert and probable child molester.

  2. Have you asked them? by djnanite · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Has anyone bothered to ask women directly why they chose not to do Computer Science?

    You know, rather than just guessing...

    1. Re:Have you asked them? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Quiet, sweetheart. The men are talking.

    2. Re:Have you asked them? by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 5, Funny

      Has anyone bothered to ask women directly

      Yes, they did ask. But the women got all in a big huff, and snapped back, "You SHOULD know that already, and SHOULDN'T need to ask. You're simply don't CARE about us, or pay us any attention."

      If it was computer geeks taking the survey, they probably wouldn't get any answers from females anyway, so they might as well try to create some abstract association.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    3. Re:Have you asked them? by amiga3D · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I wonder if maybe Men and Women have different interests?

    4. Re:Have you asked them? by vlm · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Has anyone bothered to ask women directly why they chose not to do Computer Science?

      You know, rather than just guessing...

      I know you're probably going for the laughs, but if X% decide to go into almost entirely female nursing or early childhood education or mostly female education, then you're going to have a hell of a time convincing an extra X% to go into CS just to balance it out.

      You're really screwed (uh, metaphorically, although it worked out for me practically) if there are more female nursing students than your entire engineering school. You need quotas, not so much to keep the boys out of engineering and CS, but to keep the girls out of ed and marketing and nursing.

      I'd be unholy pissed off at the world if I were forced into early childhood education just to "get the ratios correct", and I'm sure the chicks being forced into neckbeard-land would be equally pissed.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
  3. And the conclusion? by YodasEvilTwin · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The summary doesn't mention why the internet might be responsible. From TFA:

    The first hypothesis I propose is that Internet culture supports a belief in a meritocratic environment [9], which has been linked, ironically, to an increase in biased behavior [10] as it provides moral cover for prejudiced beliefs. Encountering overt, covert or benevolent sexism undermines both women’s performance and interest [11]. Even if such beliefs were prevalent in professional spaces before the Internet, as masculine gender performance is common, aggressive and publicly visible in online forums [12] women no longer have to be the target of such behavior themselves before college in order to associate it with the industry and choose an alternative career.

    The second hypothesis is that the Internet encourages a sense of belonging [13] to the masculinized culture of software development [14], which alienates many women [15] by causing them to feel excluded from a camaraderie-focused profession [16]. Again, while this culture may have existed before the Internet, women with Internet access are likely to encounter such attitudes earlier and more frequently. To the best of my knowledge, whether the Internet has changed the culture of computing itself, either in America or internationally, is an outstanding question.

    TL;DR The internet is dominated by sexist men, which discourages women from getting involved in related fields.

    This is a pretty interesting idea, and one that I'm inclined to ascribe some level of truth. I'm not too sure what we can do about it, though, other than continue the push for people to stop being so damned prejudiced.

  4. Why is this even an issue? by JustNiz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    >> who is to blame for the declining enrollment of women in Computer Science

    Blame? really? Last time I checked, people have a free choice as to what field they want to work/study in. If women choose not to do CS then its entirely their choice. No one is to blame.

    Why is the ratio of men to women in CS even an issue? Its not intrinsically wrong that it mostly attracts men. Can we end this sexist crap please?

    There are plenty of professions that have a significant majority of women:
    http://jobs.aol.com/articles/2010/07/27/where-women-work/
    I don't see any corresponding massive outcry about how to get more men in those fields.

    We just need to offer equal education opportunities to both genders and employ people based on merit not gender. Positive discrimination is still discrimination.

    If there's a shortage of CS grads for employers to hire then its a supply and demand problem not a gender issue. Employers will just have to suck it up and pay developers what they're worth in the free market. Oh noes! the horror! Who knows, that might even lead to more people choosing to do a CS degree. Problem solved.

    1. Re:Why is this even an issue? by JustNiz · · Score: 3, Funny

      As a guy I'd have gone into nursing but those little dresses and stockings make my butt look big.

    2. Re:Why is this even an issue? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Spoken like the ignorant white middle class male you most likely are

      Yeah, speaking of prejudice...

      Last time you checked?

      Last time I checked, my undergrad EE program received 0 female applicants my year. What do you think we should have done about that? Women were not applying; that was not our fault, so stop blaming us. By the way, women do as well as men when they do bother to apply to engineering programs:

      http://www.purdue.edu/uns/x/2009b/090804OhlandEngineering.html

      those are for the most part low-status, low-paying servant style jobs

      Oh, so I guess we do not really care about gender equality in lower status jobs. What was that you said about the middle class? You know, that stupid, insulting, derogatory reference you made to middle class white men? Sounds like you think the middle class is the only thing worth focusing on, and moreover, only the upper middle class.

      Yet as anyone who has dealt with feminists knows, that's the story with 21st century feminism. Back in the 70s, feminists were trying to ensure that women had equal opportunities in both high-status and low-status jobs -- like sanitation work. Today, feminists have fallen into the same trap as everyone else, belittling and ignoring blue collar work and focusing only on glamorous, "You can be part of the 1% if you try hard enough!" careers.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
  5. Its by JustNiz · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...because women and hard logic are such a natural mix.

  6. Re:Women are by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My undergrad EE department was told that the environment was driving women away, and that was supposed to explain why we had no qualified female applicants. Obviously they knew what sort of atmosphere our department had before they had even arrived!

    What amuses me is the number of feminists who criticizing the disproportionate representation of women in science and math who never tried to advance beyond a high school education in those subjects. The women I have met in engineering were tough, knew how to put down sexually offensive comments before things got out of hand (I do not think anyone can reasonably expect offensive comments to never occur -- but there is a point at which those comments become a problem, and the women I am referring could stop that from happening with a few well-chosen words), and hated the special status women receive during admissions to engineering schools (they felt it belittled their abilities).

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  7. Re:Stop what? How about fuck you? by ifwm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm sorry I'm being mean, but goddamn it, you guys. I'm sick of hearing this same tired bullshit, as though it occurred to no one to actually look the fuck around and see that this defensive attitude toward ignoring the fucking problem and hoping it goes away is making shit worse

    You're not being mean, you're being gullible.

    First, The lack of focus on diversity

    doesn't exist, and should have been your first clue you were swallowing a load. Just look at the extensive and well documented attempts to introduce "diversity". The idea that there is ANY lack of focus on diversity is quite frankly, ridiculous.

    Second you cite "negative experiences" as though it were lynching and sexual harassment, and not "long hours, tedious work, and a lack of social opportunities".

    In short, you bought a line.

  8. Re:Bullshit PC question yields bullshit PC results by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 3, Insightful

    if gender equality is so very important then why aren't ... women encouraged to join professions such as 'coal miner' or 'oil rig workers'

    Long ago, in an earlier age of feminism, that was considered a worth goal. Feminists worked hard to give women opportunities to work in blue collar jobs -- sanitation, factory work, railroads, mining, etc. Then one day, the libertarians convinced everyone that the only jobs that matter are white collar jobs, and the next generation of feminists fell into the trap of believing that. Suddenly, feminists stopped worry about blue collar work, and started focusing on white collar professions, since as everyone knows, white collar work is the only kind of work people should aspire to. Simultaneously, feminists grew to despise lower class women, because those women did not fall into feminists' idealized vision of the successful, professional (i.e. white collar professional) woman who has "equal access" to joining the 1% (equal to men, which is to say, only an illusion of access).

    This century's feminists love the upper middle class, white-collar, middle-management suburban woman. That is all they are worried about. When forced to answer questions about women in blue collar professions, today's feminists base all their answers on the assumption that those women are desperately fighting to get a white collar position (not true).

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  9. Re:Bullshit PC question yields bullshit PC results by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 3, Funny

    They're being given a bloody red carpet

    See, it's jokes like that which get us in trouble.

  10. Internet Harassment by Daetrin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There are already too many posts asking some variant of "what makes it so bad for women?" or "they have free will, if they're not in the industry it's their own choice." Well i suspect that incidents like this are part of the reason why. I really can't imagine why young women starting to consider their career options might see that and consider staying as far away from the internet professionally as they possibly can.(/sarcasm)

    There are also a number of comments about how the women who are in the industry know how to handle the macho bullshit that gets tossed around, implying that it's therefore okay i guess, since some women can put up with it and not all of them are being forced out of the industry. Well of course the women who are still around can handle it, selection bias much? That doesn't mean they should _have_ to handle it though.

    You know, every time there's a story about some company, or even most of an entire industry, doing something assholeish to its employees people pop out of the woodwork to say something about how the free market will correct the issue because all the good employees will find work at companies that treat them properly, and the companies abusing their employees will thus inevitable fail. I wonder how much that group overlaps with the group that think women ought to just suck it up when they're treated poorly.

    It's funny how when a company/industry/environment treats all their employees badly it's the company that's at fault. This libertarian/republican/conservative viewpoint is that it's up to the employees to fix the problem, but at least the company is still clearly designated as the problem in the equation. But suddenly when the company/industry/environment is specifically targeting women for bad treatment, whether that's intentional or not, and the women choose to go elsewhere, it's not the free market responding to the fault of the company, it's the fault of the women for not being willing to put up with the shit they're dealt.

    --
    This Space Intentionally Left Blank
  11. Re:Stop what? How about fuck you? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Pretty much.

    Women don't go into IT/CS fields for the same reason that they don't go into, say, Engineering all that often: they don't fit in. Most women are still looking for a career for its socially-expanding capabilities. First and foremost, that means it's going to pay well, and second of all, it's going to allow them to rub shoulders with people they both want to socialize with and who might do some good for their social/personal life in the long term.

    Just because many (most) women no longer see college as a marriage prep school to culture them and help them find a wealthy husband does not mean that they are not sating the same underlying desires.

    IT/CS fields do not pay well compared to other fields, such as those you can enter with advanced degrees in medicine and law. It is nowhere near as prestigious as either. Their predispositions lead to them picking submissive disciplines, like paralegal and nursing as a result of this (and resulting in the mythical gender wage gap).

    IT/CS fields are unforgiving, unrelenting, and unappreciated in society as a whole. They're hard. Why would anyone in their right mind, and who doesn't have an arcane ability for bullshitting people into thinking they're competent, who doesn't have an underlying love for what they're doing, get into this? They don't.

    Chalk this one up to women, by and large, being much more socially perceptive than men. Particularly men of the geeky persuasion.

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  12. Example #1 - Teaching by brunes69 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You think CS is bad for sexism - try being a teacher, where you not only have to worry about society judging you, but also potentially lawsuits.

    The number of male elementary school teachers is declining exponentially, and a big reason is simply that men are worried (and rightfully so) that they could be subject to a lawsuit or a sex offense charge for any number of routine workplace occurrences.

    It is a very sad state of affairs. At least women in CS don't have to worry about being placed on a state sex offender registry because of their career choice.

  13. Who gives a fuck, really? by cayenne8 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Unless someone somewhere is trying to get some kind of funding based on a quota...who gives a fuck if there are more men than women in computer science or anything?

    I mean really...what does it matter? There's more men in football too...is this such a bad thing?

    There's fields where there are more women than men...is anyone bellyaching about this? If not...why?

    I keep seeing this harped on....and I don't know why? Unless there is some mass conspiracy to discriminate letting women into comp sci. programs....I don't see what is wrong. Discrimination would be one thing...and I don't see anyone suggesting that. But lack of interest should be perfectly acceptable. Are we also going to start bitching that there are too many Oriental folks getting into comp sci. math or physics and less Caucasians? More men in coal mines than women? X race females more than another race of females and men?

    It is called choice.....what's wrong with that? People are different.

    The sexes are different....geez, accept it and lets go on with life.....it just doesn't matter.

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  14. Re:This is hardly specific to computer science... by MoriT · · Score: 3, Informative

    Women earn 45.5% of Mathematics degrees in the US. Engineering and Physics are only at around 25%, but they have been trending consistently upward. Computer Science, on the other hand, has declined from 38% to 25%. It is the only field with that dramatic decline.