Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Programming Education Stats

Survey: More Women Are Going Into Programming 280

itwbennett writes: We've previously discussed the dearth of women in computing. Indeed, according to U.S. Bureau and Labor Statistics estimates, in 2014 four out of five programmers and software developers in the U.S. were men. But according to a survey conducted this spring by the Application Developers Alliance and IDC, that may be changing. The survey of 855 developers worldwide found that women make up 42% of developers with less than 1 year of experience and 30% of those with between 1 and 5 years of experience. Of course, getting women into programming is one thing; keeping them is the next big challenge.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Survey: More Women Are Going Into Programming

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 03, 2015 @01:00PM (#50452513)

    Perhaps we could move the craft forward rather than focusing on the players?

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      Why not both? If 1/2 the population feels excluded they certainly aren't going to be helping move the craft forward. Being more inclusive means there will be more brains working on hard problems. That's a good thing.

      • Feeling excluded is one thing. Telling people what to do is another.

        • Feeling excluded is one thing. Telling people what to do is another.

          The entire premise behind "I am offended" or "I feel excluded" is that these are not complete thoughts. The complete thought ends with "... therefore I get to dictate what you can say, how you will think, and how you will live, and if you don't comply, all manner of social pressures will come crashing down on your head."

          • It's a spectrum. I'm sure there are people who are offended by things and it would be unreasonable to accommodate them. I don't think that's the case across the board here though. If reasonable changes can be made that make more people feel comfortable and included why wouldn't want to do that?

      • /. aricle 1: We need more brains working on hard problems.

        /. article 2: There are too many people in the world. What will they all do?

    • Why don't you care? Worried about competition? Basically, if everything is fair and above board, why only 5% female programmers instead of 50%? And don't blame it on something stupid like "women don't like computers" or "it's genetic". It's purely a social problem, because the percentage has been going down over time.

      The reason it's a problem is that we want to treat all segments of the population equally. This is evidence that clearly we don't do this as a society, and that over time we are getting wor

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      I certainly care. I love computer science and I would love to do anything that can push the field forward.
      Right now, in my college, only 20% of our CS students are female. What this tells me is part of the female population is not as attracted to the field than male. I do not know why. But it means that if we could attract them as well as we attract men, we would have higher enrollments. And so the top 10% would likely to be smarter.
      In other word, I care about having more female in CS becasue I am afraid we

    • by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @07:48PM (#50454913)
      We care because the new girl who entered the programming team makes an excellent coffee.
  • >> Percentage of uterus-possessing humans in random field annoys SJWs

    I didn't realize it was Friday. Please, go on.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 03, 2015 @01:13PM (#50452645)

    I graduated with a masters degree in CS in 2008, and as such now have 7 years job experience. Watching the other women I graduated with it's entirely a retention issue. The reasons for why they left the field were wildly varying, but I only know of two who graduated with me who are still in the industry out of maybe twenty.

    • by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @03:47PM (#50453673)
      Yup. My experience is that a large percentage work for a couple of years, then start having babies and are gone forever. Daycare for one is tough, leaving two or more cute toddlers and paying for day care isn't worth going to the office.
      • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )
        But you should see that same effect with every industry, not just with CS. Toddlers aren't more expensive to care for when you program computers for a living. There clearly has to be something else going on, something specific to CS.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Take an informal survey of female programmers that you know (might be a small sample size, unfortunately). Of those who are married, what is the profession of the partner? I'm willing to bet (based on my experience) that the answer is "programmer". Even if the woman is not married to another programmer or engineer, chances are they are married to someone who makes a lot of money. I have *never* met a woman in IT who had significantly more earning potential than their husband.

          Which is not to say that I t

  • by grub ( 11606 ) <slashdot@grub.net> on Thursday September 03, 2015 @01:17PM (#50452681) Homepage Journal

    I keep the sexual harassment forms in the bottom drawer of my desk.
    That way when a woman goes to get one, I can check out her ass.
  • by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @01:30PM (#50452775)

    The fact that 48% of first programmers are women does nothing to show more women are getting into programming. It is entirely possible (and maybe probable) that it's been 48% for a long time, and what we're seeing is not more women getting into programming but that a lot of them are getting out again quickly.

    • Or that it's a natural effect of programming becoming somewhat less of an end unto itself, but as a utility for another career.

    • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )

      The fact that 48% of first programmers are women does nothing to show more women are getting into programming. It is entirely possible (and maybe probable) that it's been 48% for a long time,

      It hasn't been. For instance, here's a graph showing CS undergrad degrees [blogs.com] (which ought to correlate a fair bit) plotted against the rate at which women enroll for other degrees. For every other degree there's a steady upward trend, but for women something weird happened in 1984 and they peaked there at about 37%. Last year (assuming I'm reading it right) only about 18% of CS undergrads were women. If there's been a big spike up, that's encouraging to see.

      FWIW, I got my degree in '89 and this jibes pretty

      • by RedK ( 112790 )

        None of your data support your argument that this is a problem though. What if women just aren't majorly interested in programming in IT, just like it seems men are less interested in daycare work ?

        What barriers do you perceive for women in IT/Programming ? Because I see none. I see a bunch of folks dumping a lot of good money into "fixing" it though, so I guess there's good money to be made in pretending there is a problem.

        • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )

          None of your data support your argument that this is a problem though. What if women just aren't majorly interested in programming in IT, just like it seems men are less interested in daycare work ?

          You are seriously countering objective data with "What if..." and absolutely nothing else? Simply stopping your search for information the instant you hit on something possibly exculpatory is for climate deniers and anti-vaxxers, not a self-respecting nerd. If you think there's a hole there, attack it. Go find yourself some data on women's "natural interests" that controls for societal effects, and throw it up here.

          (Hint: unless you are far better at this than I, you won't find it. I've looked. It turns ou

          • The funny thing is, a lot of people in this thread do the whole "assertions" thing and lack evidence.

            There's a glass ceiling...except for people like Marissa Mayer, Sheryl Sandberg and Hillary Clinton.
            There's a brogrammer culture...except nobody's hauled out any proof that this is a thing.
            There's evidence that maybe men and women have different preferences in careers...except where there isn't.
            There's an overwhelming amount of sexism that takes place in workplaces...except in places that are pretty helpful

      • 84 was the peak of the first computer gold rush.

        The girls were just picking majors based on salary surveys.

        • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )

          The girls were just picking majors based on salary surveys.

          And guys don't do this? You have some data to back this speculation up with? I wouldn't dare make a blanket speculation about jewish people all being greedy or black people all being lazy without even a fig leaf of data to hold up. So why is it OK to do that with a stereotype-based argument about women being greedy and less interested in intellectual pursuits for their own sake than men?

          I really don't get this. I don't get why its OK with everyone for an entire industry to be such a huge demographic anoma

          • Dimwit, I will explain.

            I will use smalls number so you can understand.

            There are 2 people majoring in CS, they genuinely like it etc. They are both men (duh).

            Now the salaries go crazy and the greedy show up, 4 men and 4 women join the program. What just happened to the skew?

            • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )

              Dimwit, I will explain. I will use smalls number so you can understand. There are 2 people majoring in CS, they genuinely like it etc. They are both men (duh). Now the salaries go crazy and the greedy show up, 4 men and 4 women join the program. What just happened to the skew?

              So you are proposing that in fact the absolute numbers completely changed around in 1984, and that's what caused this? OK...so why didn't you actually go grab those numbers to prove me wrong?

              Perhaps because the actual numbers [stanford.edu] don't show that? See, the absolute enrollment numbers for men and women went up during that period for a further 2 years, and then leveled off. There was a bubble there, but it peaked years after the share of women did, and the level on either side in absolute terms was roughly the 19

              • You need to look at the decade running up to it, not 2 years. There was a great increase in money chasing enrollment running up to the peak. At 2 year difference in the peak isn't likely statistically significant.

                I sat on the floor of the overstuffed lecture halls. EE not CS. But close enough.

                • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )

                  You need to look at the decade running up to it, not 2 years. There was a great increase in money chasing enrollment running up to the peak. At 2 year difference in the peak isn't likely statistically significant.

                  Again, I'm through chasing zephyrs on this subject. Do you have data that shows "money chasing enrollment"? Because I could counter-speculate that the whole argument is BS, based on specialist doctors and lawyers being options making far more money for about the same intellectual requirements if you don't care about anything but money, and then you could argue they aren't the same because of the extra education required, and we can be here forever arguing over made up BS.

                  Data, or it isn't an argument.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Indeed, retention is a problem. We are hearing a variety of reasons. Fortunately overt sexism does seem to be declining, but things like unwanted attention, suspicion (some people seem to think all women are litigious or primed to accuse) and poor work/life balance are sill big issues. Of course they affect men as well, but are more likely to make women switch career.

      Having said that, the numbers presented here don't seem to tally with the numbers graduating. Could women be switching to programming after gr

      • by T.E.D. ( 34228 )

        Having said that, the numbers presented here don't seem to tally with the numbers graduating. Could women be switching to programming after graduation?

        They actually don't jibe with any numbers I've seen. It was a self-selected internet survey, so about the furthest thing from scientific that could be imagined.

        It would be nice if it were true, and we've finally got this issue on the way to being fixed. But the survey just being an outlier seems the more likely explanation right now.

  • Basement (Score:5, Funny)

    by Art Challenor ( 2621733 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @01:31PM (#50452789)
    Do women programmer's live in their dad's basement? Just asking...
    • Do women programmer's live in their dad's basement?

      Well, if it tracks the male programming population, probably only about 90% or so of 'em.

      Yes, that was a joke... Now you know why I don't make them often.

  • Best and Brightest (Score:2, Insightful)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 )

    Stories about women in tech always bring out the best in Slashdot readers.

    • by T.E.D. ( 34228 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @02:14PM (#50453119)

      Stories about women in tech always bring out the best in Slashdot readers.

      It really has gotten to where I dread opening any such story. For everything else, I can find really good insightful commentary. For this subject, it seems like all the moderators are members of the Bobby Riggs [wikipedia.org] fan club.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @02:07PM (#50453063) Journal
    It is very common for women to enter IT side in India. In the recent years more women are graduating from college, more women are getting engineering and medical degrees than men in India.
  • by TeknoHog ( 164938 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @04:32PM (#50453957) Homepage Journal
    ...more programmers are going into women, if you catch my drift. And I think you do, being the ever so smart programmer yourself.
  • by clifwlkr ( 614327 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @05:30PM (#50454241)
    Well one thing that comes to mind is that some of the best programmers tend to be of personality type INTJ. The frequency of INTJ in male vs. female population is clearly shown to be radically different. Let's look at all of the INTx types:
    Intellectuals (NT)
    Population Male Female
    ENTJ - Chief 4% 5.5% 2.5%
    ENTP - Originator 4.5% 6% 3%
    INTJ - Strategist 1.5% 2.5% 0.5%
    INTP - Engineer 2.5% 4% 1%
    All NTs 12.5% 18% 7%

    Seems to pretty clearly show why we might have a difference in the number of male vs. female programmers, huh? I doubt the males are forcing personality types on them.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      There are much more interesting numbers than that. IQ is not a good indicator of overall intelligence, but it directly tests a few things like pattern recognition and abstract logic. While the curves of men and women are very close, the curves do NOT have the same shape.

      The curve for women is steep while the curve for men is more shallow in comparison. This makes men's IQ more variable than women's (this same variableness compared to women is noted in tons of such charts). In addition, there are more men th

  • All this hemming and hawing and yet no one has asked why it is important to force, yes force, women into programming.

    What do they offer that is unique?

Every nonzero finite dimensional inner product space has an orthonormal basis. It makes sense, when you don't think about it.

Working...