• DocumentCode
    1276106
  • Title

    Caring about connections: gender and computing

  • Author

    Margolis, Jane ; Fisher, Allan ; Miller, Faye

  • Author_Institution
    Graduate Sch. of Educ. & Inf. Sci., California Univ., Los Angeles, CA, USA
  • Volume
    18
  • Issue
    4
  • Firstpage
    13
  • Lastpage
    20
  • Abstract
    For nearly four years (1995-9), we have interviewed female and male computer science students about their experiences studying computer science at Carnegie Mellon University, in one of the top computer science departments in the country (USA). We heard differences in orientations to computing in men´s and women´s interviews when they arrive at the university. We have traced the effects of these differences on women´s sense of belonging and comfort in the program, and on their decisions to stay or leave. While most of the male students describe an early and persistent magnetic attraction between themselves and computers, women much more frequently link their computer science interest to a larger societal framework. Nearly half of the women we interviewed attached their interest in computer science to other arenas, such as medicine, education, space exploration, and the arts. For many of these women, while interest in computing is strong, they are concerned that their study of computer science not require a myopic focus on the machine, or detach them from people and other concerns. We discuss how computer science curriculum and culture frequently mirror and bestow prestige on an orientation toward computing commonly identified with men, while devaluing and pushing to the margins the orientations associated with women. The identification of computing as a male domain is so pervasive that men suffer far less from a mismatch with the dominant culture than do women. In this context, we discuss the importance of “revisioning” computer science, so that the answer to the question: “what is computer science?” incorporates and values women´s perspectives as well as men´s
  • Keywords
    computer science education; gender issues; human factors; USA; computer science curriculum; computer science department; computer science interest; dominant culture; female computer science students; gender issues; magnetic attraction; male computer science students; male domain; myopic focus; societal framework; Art; Computer science; Computer science education; Educational institutions; Heart; Industrial economics; Information systems; Mirrors; Space exploration; Testing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Technology and Society Magazine, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0278-0097
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/44.808844
  • Filename
    808844