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Author National Research Council (U.S.). Committee On Status and Participation of Women In STEM Disciplines and Careers.

Title Blueprint for the future : framing the issues of women in science in a global context : summary of a workshop / Catherine Didion, Lisa M. Frehill, and Willie Pearson, Jr., rapporteurs ; Committee On Status and Participation of Women In STEM Disciplines and Careers, Committee on Women in Science, Engineering, and Medicine, Policy and Global Affairs, National Research Council of the National Academies
Published Washington, D.C. : National Academies Press, ©2012

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Description 1 online resource (x, 115 pages) : illustrations
Contents Welcome and overview of the workshop -- Panel I: Cross-cultural issues [Knowledge and data sources -- Socio-historical trends -- Higher education -- Workforce segregation -- Panel discussion -- Question and answer comments] -- Panel II: Focal disciplines [Chemical sciences -- Computer science -- Mathematics and statistics -- Panel discussion -- Question and answer comments] -- Panel III: Cross-cutting themes [Role of disciplinary societies -- Promising programs -- Promising policies -- Panel discussion -- Question and answer comments] -- Concluding presentation and discussion -- Data on women researchers in sicence -- A snapshot of gender differences in education / Angelica Salvi Del Pero -- Historical perspectives on women in chemistry, computer science, and mathematics / Mariko Ogawa, Lisa M. Frehill, and Sophia Huyer -- Institutional and cultural parameters affecting women's participation in the fields of chemistry, mathematics, statistics, and computer science around the world / Anne J. MacLachlan -- Workforce sex segregation / Alice Abreu et al. -- Status of women in the chemical sciences / Robert Lichter et al. -- Computer science: cross-national snapshots of entry degrees and IT workforce in selected countries / J. McGrath Cohoon et al. -- Disciplinary societies' role in women's status in chemical sciences, computer science, and mathematics and statistics / Lisa M. Frehill -- Promising programs in science: a cross-national exploration of what works to attract and sustain women / Daryl Chubin et al. -- Promising policies / Cheryl B. Leggon and Connie L. McNeely
Summary "The scientific work of women is often viewed through a national or regional lens, but given the growing worldwide connectivity of most, if not all, scientific disciplines, there needs to be recognition of how different social, political, and economic mechanisms impact women's participation in the global scientific enterprise. Although these complex sociocultural factors often operate in different ways in various countries and regions, studies within and across nations consistently show inverse correlations between levels in the scientific and technical career hierarchy and the number of women in science: the higher the positions, the fewer the number of women. Understanding these complex patterns requires interdisciplinary and international approaches. In April 2011, a committee overseen by the National Academies' standing Committee on Women in Science, Engineering, and Medicine (CWSEM) convened a workshop entitled, "Blueprint for the Future: Framing the Issues of Women in Science in a Global Context" in Washington, D.C. CWSEM's goals are to coordinate, monitor, and advocate action to increase the participation of women in science, engineering, and medicine. The scope of the workshop was limited to women's participation in three scientific disciplines: chemistry, computer science, mathematics, and statistics. The workshop presentations came from a group of scholars and professionals who have been working for several years on documenting, analyzing, and interpreting the status of women in selected technical fields around the world. Examination of the three disciplines-chemistry, computer science, and mathematics and statistics-can be considered a first foray into collecting and analyzing information that can be replicated in other fields. The complexity of studying science internationally cannot be underestimated, and the presentations demonstrate some of the evidentiary and epistemological challenges that scholars and professionals face in collecting and analyzing data from many different countries and regions. Blueprint for the Future: Framing the Issues of Women in Science in a Global Context summarizes the workshop presentations, which provided an opportunity for dialogue about the issues that the authors have been pursuing in their work to date"--Publisher's description
Notes "In April 2011, an ad hoc committee overseen by the National Academies' standing Committee on Women in Science, Engineering, and Medicine (CWSEM) convened a workshop entitled, "Blueprint for the future: framing the issues of women in science in a global context" in Washington, D.C
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Online resource; title from resource home page (National Academies Press, viewed October 31, 2012)
Subject Women in science -- Congresses
Women scientists -- Congresses
Universities and colleges -- Faculty -- Employment -- Sex differences -- Congresses
Science.
Women.
Engineering.
Science
Women
Engineering
Health Workforce
sciences (philosophy)
engineering.
science (modern discipline)
women (female humans)
SCIENCE -- Essays.
SCIENCE -- Reference.
Women
Science
Engineering
Women in science
Women scientists
SUBJECT United States https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D014481
Genre/Form proceedings (reports)
Conference papers and proceedings
Conference papers and proceedings.
Actes de congrès.
Form Electronic book
Author Didion, Catherine Jay.
Frehill, Lisa M.
Pearson, Willie, 1945-
National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on Women in Science, Engineering, and Medicine.
ISBN 9780309225205
0309225205