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Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
Mary Theresa Walsh – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Success in STEM-based fields provides a path to highly regarded and powerful positions in society. Hegemonic structures of society have excluded women and other non-hegemonic groups from these fields and from recognition in these fields. Between 1903 and 2018 the Nobel Prize for Physics was awarded 113 times to 212 individuals. Marie Curie was…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Females, Sex, Physics
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Womack, Veronica Y.; Onyango, Letitia; Campbell, Patricia B.; McGee, Richard – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2023
Black women in graduate school can experience stress due to blatant and subtle acts of gendered racism. However, we do not know how such stressors are navigated over time among those who successfully complete their PhDs. The current study used a Black feminist thought framework and narrative analysis to conduct a longitudinal exploration of how…
Descriptors: Women Scientists, African American Students, Doctoral Students, Biomedicine
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Ross, Kathryn; Galaudage, Shanika; Clark, Tegan; Lowson, Nataliea; Battisti, Andrew; Adam, Helen; Ross, Alexandra K.; Sweaney, Nici – Australian Journal of Education, 2023
The visibility of female role models in science is vital for engaging and retaining women in scientific fields. In this study, we analyse four senior secondary science courses delivered across the states and territories in Australia: Biology, Chemistry, Environmental Science, and Physics. We compared male and female representation within the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Secondary School Science, Gender Bias
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Ana Jurado Gallego; Mª Elena González Alfaya; Rosario Mérida Serrano – Gender and Education, 2025
In this study, carried out in different provinces of Spain, we assess the impact of a co-educational science program conducted with children aged 3-6, whose objective is to deconstruct gender stereotypes in science by studying the biographies of female scientists. The evaluative methodology we use is based on analysing the opinions the pupils…
Descriptors: Sex Stereotypes, Gender Bias, Childrens Attitudes, Science Programs
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Kawabata, Tomoko; Nagahori, Noriko – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2018
The objective of this research is to discuss how Sociology contributes to identify "the experience of the unconscious gender bias" against female scientists and to assess its impact on their career development. This research is at the first stage of three-year research project. The final aim of this research is to identify the social…
Descriptors: Sociology, Social Science Research, Gender Bias, Women Scientists
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Braun, Gregory; Tierney, Dennis; Schmitzer, Heidrun – Physics Teacher, 2011
Rosalind Franklin, a chemical physicist (1920-1958), used x-ray diffraction to determine the structure of DNA. What exactly could she read out from her x-ray pattern, shown in Fig. 1? In lecture notes dated November 1951, R. Franklin wrote the following: "The results suggest a helical structure (which must be very closely packed) containing 2, 3…
Descriptors: Genetics, Women Scientists, Biophysics, Gender Bias
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Hedlin, Maria – Gender and Education, 2011
The purpose of this article is to elucidate how the girl who chooses technology came to be the symbol of the non-traditional pupil's choice in Sweden. In the early 1960s it was hoped that girls would enter workshop training and then commit themselves to engineering mechanics jobs at a time when Sweden was characterised by economic growth which was…
Descriptors: Females, Career Choice, Foreign Countries, Nontraditional Students
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Hazari, Zahra; Sonnert, Gerhard; Sadler, Philip M.; Shanahan, Marie-Claire – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2010
This study explores how students' physics identities are shaped by their experiences in high school physics classes and by their career outcome expectations. The theoretical framework focuses on physics identity and includes the dimensions of student performance, competence, recognition by others, and interest. Drawing data from the Persistence…
Descriptors: High Schools, College Students, Women Scientists, Career Choice
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Sulaiman, Noor Fauziah; AlMuftah, Hend – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2010
Under-representation of women in engineering has received a great deal of attention, but remained limited largely to a Western context. Thus, this article aims to unveil the barriers to progress, tracking the performance and the emerging trend of success at the undergraduate level of women in engineering in a different cultural dimension.…
Descriptors: Barriers, Engineering Education, Females, Academic Achievement
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Morley, Louise – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2010
This article critically examines the concept of gender mainstreaming and raises questions about a series of category slippages in debates and discussions. Some key concerns are the way in which women are constructed as a unified analytical category, and how gender equality is frequently reduced to issues of representation. It also critically…
Descriptors: Sexual Harassment, Foreign Countries, Misconceptions, Comparative Education
Hill, Catherine; Corbett, Christianne; St. Rose, Andresse – American Association of University Women, 2010
The number of women in science and engineering is growing, yet men continue to outnumber women, especially at the upper levels of these professions. In elementary, middle, and high school, girls and boys take math and science courses in roughly equal numbers, and about as many girls as boys leave high school prepared to pursue science and…
Descriptors: Women Scientists, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics
Page, Melanie C.; Bailey, Lucy E.; Van Delinder, Jean – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2009
The under-representation of women in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) fields is of continuing concern, as is the lack of women in senior positions and leadership roles. During a time of increasing demand for science and engineering enterprise, the lack of women and minorities in these academic disciplines needs to be addressed by…
Descriptors: Females, Disproportionate Representation, Gender Issues, Science Education
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Mitts, Charles R. – Journal of Technology Education, 2008
Society is increasingly dominated by rapidly evolving systems of technology. The goal of technology education, as an academic component of public education, is to ensure that students become "technologically literate" members of society who are able to understand, access, use, manage, and control these technological systems.…
Descriptors: Social Status, Sex Fairness, Technology Education, Gender Bias
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Campbell, Ashley; Skoog, Gerald – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2004
A gender gap in academic science continues despite persistent efforts at multiple levels to attract and retain talented women. Thus, impediments to women pursuing careers in science, and particularly in academia, continue to exist. To learn more about how the barriers women in science face can be eased or circumvented, the authors examined how an…
Descriptors: Gender Bias, Science Programs, Women Scientists, Science Careers
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Kahveci, Ajda; Southerland, Sherry A.; Gilmer, Penny J. – Science Education, 2008
The focus of this research was to understand how a program for women in science, mathematics, and engineering (SM&E) at college level in the southeastern United States functioned to influence women's decision making in terms of participation in these fields. By employing Lave and Wenger's theory of situated learning, we explored this program…
Descriptors: Women Scientists, Females, Womens Education, Decision Making
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