So much of the attention on recruiting women to the IT sector, and then
keeping hold of them, focuses on qualifications. How can we interest girls in
what is often deemed a geeky, boys-only domain? Is it too late once girls have
reached the stage of choosing their degrees or possible careers – should we be
looking at implementing more IT for girls schemes at primary-school and early
secondary-school level instead?
Encouraging more females to follow technology from GCSE through degree-level
and into a career is an important objective based on recent education
statistics. While at GCSE level, girls constitute 44 percent of IT exams sat, at
A-level this figure shrinks to 28 percent. And by the time they get to
university, women make up under a fifth of IT graduates.
Advertisement
But the education system is only part of the equation. The majority of women
I spoke to during my research for this special focus provide evidence that
formal qualifications are not always the answer to drawing more females to IT
careers. Most of them had not deliberately studied for a career in IT, but
rather had fallen into a job using computers and then progressed into more
technical roles; or had worked their way up the business ladder through a
variety of roles in sales, marketing and other backgrounds before reaching the
top of the tree in an IT firm or department.
Few had technical degrees to prove their IT skills. Rather, the consensus was
that on-the-job experience and professional qualifications gathered throughout a
career were key to their success.
Confidence, not qualifications, was cited as a key to recruiting more women
to IT. The interviewees all agreed that a lack of self-belief and fear of using
a computer were core obstacles to more females entering the sector.
The women partly attributed their progression in the industry to not being
intimidated by technology. A bugbear for many interviewed was other females in
the sector playing down their role by insisting they weren’t technical; or those
considering switching to an IT career talking themselves out of it due to a lack
of technical understanding. Women considering a career in IT need to have
confidence in their abilities, and be less concerned about qualifications, or
lack thereof.
Another perception that the women participating in these features wanted to
challenge was that women struggle to progress in IT careers compared to other
professions. They stressed that female board members and senior executives are
in the minority across all sectors. And those who have reached the top pointed
out that although they might find themselves the only woman in the room at
certain meetings or events, they were always treated as equal.
As this issue’s series of
articles demonstrates, there’s still a huge amount of work to be done to redress
the gender balance in the IT sector. But it was a refreshing change to hear
about the upbeat experiences of so many women already succeeding in technology
roles, to counterbalance the statistics and demonstrate the reality of what
women considering an IT career can expect.
Comments
Have your say on this article