2013
DOI: 10.1080/19378629.2013.855781
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‘Yes, I do belong’: the women who stay in engineering

Abstract: Despite considerable work to encourage girls and women to enter the profession, engineering continues to be heavily male dominated, a situation which has implications for quality and gender equity. The gender disparity is accentuated by women being more likely to leave the profession than men. A number of studies have investigated why women leave engineering. This study focuses on the converse question, 'What makes some women stay when many others leave?' A survey of a cohort of Australian female civil enginee… Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(91 citation statements)
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“…Statistically, differences in gender are significant with respect to the indicator of actual hours worked, but the relationship between the variables is weak and fails to account for 5% of the observed differences using the ANOVA model. These results seem to support the fact that women are required to adjust to the hegemonic models of organisational work in technology companies, as advocated by some female authors (Lie and Sørensen, 1996;Kvande 1999;Faulkner, 2009Faulkner, , 2014Ayre, Mills and Gill, 2013).…”
Section: Characteristics Of Technological Employmentsupporting
confidence: 59%
See 4 more Smart Citations
“…Statistically, differences in gender are significant with respect to the indicator of actual hours worked, but the relationship between the variables is weak and fails to account for 5% of the observed differences using the ANOVA model. These results seem to support the fact that women are required to adjust to the hegemonic models of organisational work in technology companies, as advocated by some female authors (Lie and Sørensen, 1996;Kvande 1999;Faulkner, 2009Faulkner, , 2014Ayre, Mills and Gill, 2013).…”
Section: Characteristics Of Technological Employmentsupporting
confidence: 59%
“…Previous studies have suggested that women work harder than men to achieve the same positions in male-dominated sectors (Kvande, 1999;Faulkner, 2007Faulkner, , 2009Faulkner, , 2014Ayre, Mills and Gill, 2013;Vergés, González and Almeda, 2014). Data from EPA validates this assertion when it compares educational grades of men and women working in the technology sector.…”
Section: Characteristics Of Technological Employmentsupporting
confidence: 50%
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