AMA reports 57% of recent psychiatry residents are female so expect those numbers to change soon. https://wire.ama-assn.org/education/how-medical-specialties-vary-gender When it comes to psychology, the ratio has widened to 66% female, but they go of course through different training http://www.apa.org/workforce/publications/13-demographics/index.aspx As well all know practitioners from both fields work together from a clinical and behavorial standpoint. The National Girls Collaborative Project claims that 62% of the social science workforce is female. https://ngcproject.org/statistics The following article claims that women are at parity or better in life sciences, psychology and social sciences in academia in both students and professorships http://www.umass.edu/preferen/You%20Must%20Read%20This/CeciGintherKahnWilliamsPSPI-10-2014.pdf I might reconsider that academic research, at least in the social sciences to be sexist if women are more likely to be the authors. |
Introverts are overrepresented in IT jobs. One study found that ISTJ, INTJ and INTP make together 50% of software professionals (they comprise 17% of the population). The overrepresentation found in this study was the most blatant for INTJs (2.1% of the population, 15% in the study) and INTPs (3.3% of the population, 12% in the study). Other studies may differ in percentages, but they all conclude that introverts with "T" component (ISTJs, INTPs, INTJs) plus sometimes extraverts with "T" component are overrepresented. Hence, I postulate: Start shaming the introverts. We INTJs/INTPs should be aware of our introvert privilege. Start affirmative actions for extroverts with "F" component, such as ESFJ (one study found ZERO ESFJs, while they are more than 12% of the population!!!). After all, the differences in the percentage of different MBTI types couldn't be possibly due to their different interests and fact that they find different jobs interesting. Extrovert Feelers gap is surely due to harmful stereotypes, discriminatory practices and introvert privilege. |
obvious troll is obvious |
Perhaps intentionally so, but higher representation of introverts in tech, particularly subgroups of introerts, relative to their population, would indicate that some traits are more expressed with regards to interest in STEM, but not with success in STEM. |
Google is a particularly intense echo chamber because it is in the middle of Silicon Valley and is so life-encompassing as a place to work. With free food, internal meme boards and weekly companywide meetings, Google becomes a huge part of its employees’ lives. Some even live on campus. For many, including myself, working at Google is a major part of their identity, almost like a cult with its own leaders and saints, all believed to righteously uphold the sacred motto of “Don’t be evil.” https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-i-was-fired-by-google-1502481290?mod=djcm_OBV1_092216 |
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https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/02/the-more-gender-equality-the-fewer-women-in-stem/553592/?utm_source=twb
Interesting. it mirrors what some said on this thread but were shot down.
The moral of the story is, we shouldn't be burning resources in forcing girls to get into stem. In fact we should be celebrating that they don't have to and can self actualize in what they find most interesting. That doesn't mean we shouldn't actively combat discrimination against women who do CHOOSE to be software devs for instance, but it isn't a huge deal if they'd rather self actualize at a fun non-profit instead. |
pretty much waht the atlantic just today. |
From the article:
As a woman in STEM (Ivy Physics PhD) I would suggest that maybe it's the fact that we are harassed and belittled from the minute we set foot into our first advanced STEM classroom. Personally, I'm not sure at this point the goal should be to convince more girls to go into STEM so much as it should be to make sure those of us who do aren't treated like interlopers and to take harassment seriously. I have an employee who consistently compares me and my responsibilities to those of his SAHW. I earn twice his salary, and he simply doesn't have the technical chops to do my job...yet he can't get past constantly talking about how hard it must be to have to raise kids and work (as if he's not doing the same). Women aren't not choosing STEM because we don't like...we're leaving because we are treated like garbage. |
perhaps you would feel more at home being a physics phd in tehran? care to move to the middle east tomorrow? |
I wasn't aware that our bar for comparison was Iran... That said, your point is a non-sequitor. The question is why do women in America not choose STEM. One possibility is that we don't like it. But the reality is that some of us do. We like it so much, in fact, we put up with non-stop harassment to pursue careers in STEM...and then have randos on the internet suggest we should just be happy we don't live in an Islamic state when we point out the reality of what it's like to be an American woman in STEM. |
same reason everyone of my friends left STEM. developers are treated like garbage. And it is the huge influx of guest workers that allows companies to treat people as disposable widgets. Stop the H1Bs, H4s, L1s, F1s, OPTs, H2Bs and all the other subsidies for companies to bring in cheap disposable guest workers. |
+1 well said! |
Actually, you missed her point. The guys in the article thought their job was so fun, they did it on the weekend for free. She didn't have the same passion. I kind of hate the article, because it will lead to more stereotyping, and I kind of have to admit she's totally right. In 20+ years in tech (the network/hardware side, which is far more male-dominated than software), I've never worked with another woman. I've tried to recruit, both in the workplace and with young girls at school career fairs. I've never been successful, despite proving to some software engineers that their skills were very transferrable. The fact is, the job is stressful enough that you *have* to find it fun. The field changes all the time; you're constantly getting your hands dirty; you spend a lot of time learning new skills on your own; and it's not family friendly nor filled with sparkling conversationalists. (I've never been in a meeting where anyone asked what we did last weekend.) But to some of us, it's intensely interesting work. I'm holding out hope that the current generation of kids who grew up with tech with even the gender playing field a bit. No evidence so far at my workplace. |
^Agree, well said |