Why Some Colleges are Better than Others at Getting Women into STEM Careers

Posted on

MarketWatch,

Some American colleges are finding answers to a question that has bedeviled employers and policy makers alike: how to get more women into the high-paying, in-demand fields that drive today’s economy.

Those schools, a new analysis finds, are using a range of strategies — from hiring more women faculty in fields where they’re traditionally underrepresented to setting up specific programs geared toward advancing female students’ ambitions in science, technology, engineering and math, or “STEM” — to prepare women for careers historically dominated by male graduates.

[…]

“If it continues to be the white men who are doing the best coming out of colleges then to some extent higher education is failing in its fundamental mission to create opportunity for anyone who is willing to work hard,” said Barbara Gault, the vice president and executive director of the Institute for Women’s Policy Research.

Read more at MarketWatch.com>>

Narrow the Wage Gap through Access to Good Jobs

Half of the gender wage gap is due to women working in different occupations and sectors than men. Improving women’s access to good middle-skill jobs can help close the wage gap and improve women’s economic security.

Find a Target JobRead the Full Report

Latest News

4 / 13 / 17

The Surprising Solution to the Equal Pay Problem

Read More

4 / 10 / 17

Closing the Skills Gap with Plant Tours, Pep Talks and Child Care

Read More
Twitter outputted an error:
Could not authenticate you..

A Project of

With Support from