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Alicia Garcia-Holgado; Andrea Vazquez-Ingelmo; Francisco Jose Garcia-Penalvo – IEEE Transactions on Education, 2024
Contribution: Gender mainstreaming in university teaching should be covered in all the knowledge areas. This work successfully introduces the gender perspective as part of the methodological approach to teaching and learning in Computer Science. Background: This study describes how gender mainstreaming has been introduced and matured during six…
Descriptors: Computer Science, Gender Differences, Equal Education, Inclusion
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Anastasia M. Schauer; Jessie Liu; Christopher Saldaña; Katherine Fu – International Journal of STEM Education, 2025
Background: Even among women who persist in the gender-imbalanced engineering fields, women on engineering design teams tend to take on non-technical roles. Understanding the mechanisms that inform this phenomenon is important for encouraging more women in STEM in order to close the gender gap. Although factors such as self-efficacy, task…
Descriptors: Sex Stereotypes, Engineering Education, Gender Issues, Design
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Jue Wu; David H. Uttal – Science Education, 2024
The gender imbalance in computer science (CS) is one of the most challenging issues in American education. CS is the only science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) field in which women's representation has steadily declined in recent decades. In this study, we explored one potential approach that could be effective in increasing…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Computer Science, Females, STEM Education
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Ottemo, Andreas; Gonsalves, Allison J.; Danielsson, Anna T. – Gender and Education, 2021
Physics- and computer-related disciplines are strongly male dominated in Western higher education. Feminist research has demonstrated how this can be understood as reflecting a strong privileging of mind and rationality (over body/nature/emotions) in these disciplines, which harmonises with broader notions of masculinity as transcendental and…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Computer Science Education, Gender Bias
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Taylor, Harriet G.; Mounfield, Luegina C. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1994
Presents research conducted with a group of non-computer science majors to determine the effects of prior computing experience on success in college computer science courses. Specific relationships between prior experience factors and gender were studied, and the results indicate that pre-college computing can have an important role in achieving…
Descriptors: College Students, Computer Attitudes, Computer Literacy, Computer Science
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Tsagala, Evrikleia; Kordaki, Maria – Themes in Science and Technology Education, 2008
This study focuses on how Computer Science and Engineering Students (CSESs) of both genders address certain critical issues for gender differences in the field of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE). This case study is based on research conducted on a sample of 99 Greek CSESs, 43 of which were women. More specifically, these students were asked…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Engineering Education, College Students, Gender Differences
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Alkhalifa, Eshaa – AACE Journal, 2008
Gender studies across the world have produced a wealth of information generated by studies that seek to investigate the existence of a distinction between genders in mathematical-based courses, such as Computer Science courses. However, the Middle Eastern Region remained unexplored largely throughout this effort due to gender segregation during…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Womens Education, Females, Self Efficacy
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Bunderson, Eileen D.; Christensen, Mary Elizabeth – Journal of Research on Computing in Education, 1995
Discusses a survey conducted to understand the gender imbalance and high level of female attrition in computer science. Suggests that factors influencing the rate of attrition are lack of previous experience with computers, gender-biased attitudes and behavior, interactions with other computer science students, and the nature of computer science…
Descriptors: Attitudes, College Students, Computer Science Education, Females
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Busch, Tor – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1996
Describes a study of Norwegian college students that investigated whether gender, group composition, or self-efficacy in computing has any impact on cooperation, giving or getting task-related help, and level of activity in student groups. Results confirms gender differences in self-efficacy in computing. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, College Students, Computer Science Education, Cooperative Learning