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Part Two: Girls and Computer Science In the same study, Schofield also studied the role girls played in computer science classes. She was interested in learning about the experience these girls had in classes where they were an obvious minority. Women were also a minority among the computer science staff. Five out of six of the full time teachers and all of the substitutes who taught computer science were men. The one female teacher only taught one course for half of one year. Throughout the two year study, men taught 12 1/2 of the 13 computer classes. Some women, who wanted nothing to do with computers, feared they would be asked to teach computers: Ms. Baker: Everybody thinks because I'm a math teacher I'm supposed to be able to do it [to use computers]. It's not my field. I do not plan on ever teaching computers.... I don't care if it's the wave of the future. It's just not mentally in my ... I will try to learn how to use it in my classroom because that is what they [the students] will need. But, I would never volunteer to take 30 computer courses so I could teach it. That's just not in my nature. I just don't want to do it. ...I have computer anxiety." Even Ms. Prentiss, who helped supervise the lunch time computer room, described significant differences in her computer capabilities and that of her male counterpart. Ms. Prentiss: Mr. East...can answer the questions [having] to do with programming and hardware that the kids want [answered]. My thing is the word processing and a lot of interpersonal exchange with the kids, so I think we make a real good team. The gender differences and stereotyping, however, were not limited to the makeup of the class or who was leading the class. Both were also prevalent in the textbooks used in the classroom and the related books in the school library. To begin with, women were pictured in the text markedly less than men. In a field which is already dominated by men, and already many of its teaching styles are geared towards boys, the lack of female role models throughout a textbook could have severe effects on girls interested in computer science. When women were pictured, it was in ways that reinforced traditional stereotypes about male and female occupations and status relations. Men were more often depicted as professionals, scientists, technicians, and computer scientists than were women who were shown more often than men as secretaries, clerical workers, and data entry personnel. In addition men were much more likely than women to be pictured as supervisors rather than subordinates. The most common combination of supervisor and subordinate was a male supervisor and a female subordinate. These gender stereotypes were quickly picked up upon in the classroom. It was not long before students started to incorporate them into their own life. Carl and Linda, who are working together, have worked out a division of labor. Linda is typing in the information. Carl, her friend, who appears to be helping her write the program, is looking in a manual. After Linda makes a typing mistake, Carl tells her she's fired. Many of these stereotypes are reinforced by the students previous computer knowledge. More than 75% of the boys in the introductory computer science class had reported using computers before high school, whereas only 20% of the female students reported similarly. These stereotypes were also seen in the home. Parents were more likely to encourage their son's computer interest over their daughter's. Often the family computer is kept in the boy's room instead of in a common space or in the girl's room. Many girls reported that their brothers had computers at home but they rarely were allowed to use them. Girls mentioned more often in interviews that they wished they had a computer at home, whereas boys were more likely to report having a computer at home that they rarely used. ![]() Since girls were neither encouraged by parents or teachers they often resorted to working on their own in computer science classes. Even in classes in which group work and interaction was the norm, the girls were very often isolated from the rest of the group. Studies have shown that isolated individuals tend to be evaluated more extremely than those in a large group of people. So not only were girls often discouraged from pursuing computer science, but they were often evaluated more critically. One student, explained her experience in her computer science class, "At first when I saw my class I was not very happy. I had a feeling I wasn't going to have any friends or [that] I'd just be sitting alone, cowering in a corner." Eight months later, her experience at the beginning of the year was so memorable that she felt the need to elicit such a response. She was not far from the truth, however, in her predictions of the class. Most of the girls in the advanced computer science classes were unhappy. They were picked on by the boys in the class, feared interacting with the other girls in the class and often did not understand many of the assignments that were so obviously geared towards the boys. Denise...starts to work on her computer program which is similar to everyone else's since it deals with football [statistics]. Doug laughs at Denise's program because he notices that some of the ... teams...[she listed] were not football teams, but baseball teams like the Red Sox...He laughs because she does not know which of the teams are football teams and which are not. Under these circumstances, it is no surprise that girls are often discouraged or scared away from computer science. |
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Date Last Modified: 3/15/98
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