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Maria Tamboukou – History of Education, 2024
In this article the author looks at processes of becoming a woman philosopher and scientist in eighteenth-century Europe, by focusing on educational experiences, discourses and practices revolving around the Italian mathematician, scientist and philosopher Maria Gaetana Agnesi. The author uses the Arendtian notion of "agonism" as a lens…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Archives, Educational History, Females
Kirstin Sylvester – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The current study utilizes an intersectionality framework to quantitatively explore the psychological impact of gendered racial microaggressions and the moderating role of collective coping among 96 Black women in STEM, who are currently enrolled or who recently graduated from (within past 2 years) STEM undergraduate and graduate programs at…
Descriptors: African American Students, STEM Education, Females, Sciences
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Gudyanga, Anna – Journal of Education and Practice, 2016
The study explored facets of identity formation considered to be of significance by Zimbabwean female adolescent students in physics. Four high schools that were offering physics at A' level in the Midlands Province, in Zimbabwe were targeted. Nine female adolescents doing mathematics and physics and only mathematics were chosen. Data generation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Physics, Adolescents
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Ainsbury, Liz; Heaney, Libby; Hodges, Vicki; Harkness, Laura; Russell, Laura – School Science Review, 2011
In 2007, the Women in Physics Group of the Institute of Physics initiated the Very Early Career Woman Physicist of the Year Award. The award seeks to recognise the outstanding achievements of women physicists who are embarking on a career in physics and to promote the career opportunities open to people with physics qualifications. The prize is…
Descriptors: Recognition (Achievement), Females, Physics, Employment Opportunities
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Kodate, Naonori; Kodate, Kashiko; Kodate, Takako – Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy, 2010
The global community, from UNESCO to NGOs, is committed to promoting the status of women in science, engineering and technology, despite long-held prejudices and the lack of role models. Previously, when equality was not firmly established as a key issue on international or national agendas, women's colleges played a great role in mentoring female…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Mentors, Women Scientists, Foreign Countries
Parker, Tatiana C. Tatum; Rosenthal, Rebecca – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2011
In order to understand and resolve the disproportionate number of women in the sciences it is necessary to look at historical educational trends. Through the ages there is evidence of a "pendulum effect" where there have been major shifts focusing science education either on male or females. To be able to realistically establish sustainable equity…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Teaching Styles, Women Scientists, Elementary Secondary Education
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Xu, Yonghong Jade – Research in Higher Education, 2008
This study examines the underrepresentation of women faculty in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) by comparing the intentions of attrition and turnover between genders in Research and Doctoral universities. It is found that the two genders did not differ in their intentions to depart from academia, but women faculty had a…
Descriptors: Women Scientists, Women Faculty, Disproportionate Representation, Gender Differences
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Dujari, Anuradha – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2000
Lists the women Nobel Prize laureates and questions why, with the exception of Marie Curie, all these women scientists are not well known by the public. Explains why so few women have won the Nobel Prize in science and medicine as compared to other fields. (Contains 18 references.) (YDS)
Descriptors: Mentors, Science Education, Science History, Sciences
Malveaux, Julianne – Black Issues in Higher Education, 2005
What was Larry Summers thinking? The Harvard president, as well known for his brilliance as for his tactlessness, must enjoy the taste of shoe leather, given the frequency he puts his foot in his mouth. Some "off the record" remarks he made at a research meeting of the National Bureau of Economic Research got him excoriated in the electronic and…
Descriptors: Women Scientists, Engineering, Gender Differences, Females
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Buxton, Cory A. – Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering, 2001
Explores how science and scientists were produced and reproduced within the setting of a university biology department. Explores the reflexive questions of whether increased female representation in science changed science practice and whether changing science practice increased women's representation in science. (Contains 54 references.)…
Descriptors: Biology, Females, Gender Issues, Higher Education
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Wasburn, Mara H.; Miller, Susan G. – Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory and Practice, 2004
National Council for Research on Women finds that much of the progress that women have made in science, engineering, and technology has stalled or eroded. As we enter the new millennium, there will be an increasing need for a scientifically and technologically literate workforce. A student organization, Women in Technology, was formed at Purdue…
Descriptors: Women Scientists, Student Organizations, Engineering, Females
Gallop, Nancy – 1994
Girls show an early interest in science, but are deterred from pursuing science careers as they get older due to society's stereotypes. This text identifies the many women in history who have made significant contributions to all scientific fields. The volume features the biographies of Maria Mitchell (Astronomer); Ellen Richards (Chemist,…
Descriptors: Biographies, Elementary Secondary Education, Females, Science Education
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Hoh, Yin Kiong; Boo, Hong Kwen – American Biology Teacher, 2003
The perception that scientists are intelligent white men who are socially inept, absent-minded nerds seems to prevail among students at all levels, from elementary school to college. While media may, by chance or choice, promote this image, it is unfortunately a realistic one. This stereotypical image of scientists as white men has, in part,…
Descriptors: Science Careers, Females, Women Scientists, Sciences
Ashby, Cornelia M. – US Government Accountability Office, 2004
Because of concerns about women's access to opportunities in the sciences, this report addresses: how the Department of Education (Education), Department of Energy (Energy), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and National Science Foundation (NSF) ensure that federal grant recipient institutions comply with Title IX in math,…
Descriptors: Women Scientists, Gender Issues, Females, Federal Legislation
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Hughes, W. Jay – Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering, 2002
Examines the relationship between gender attributions of science and academic attributes for undergraduate science, mathematics, and technology majors from the perspective of gender schema theory. (Contains 32 references.) (Author/YDS)
Descriptors: Females, Higher Education, Mathematics, Science Education
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