Are girls really underrepresented in STEM? Yes. In the U.S., the workforce is pretty evenly split between men and women, but in STEM fields men make up 73 percent of the workforce to women’s 27 percent. Why?It’s easy to want to find a well-meaning solution for this disparity, or even to brush it off as unimportant. But achieving a gender parity in STEM fields (particularly computer science, engineering, and programmers, among others) isn’t just a feel-good social justice crusade. The number of open tech jobs far outpaces the population of traditionally qualified candidates—data projections have pointed to a global shortage of 85 million tech workers by 2030.
It’s not a matter of encouraging girls to pursue STEM programs just for the heck of it, to prove they can and earn a good paycheck—it’s a matter of graduating enough highly-skilled workers to meet economic demand.Still, the imbalanced statistics for the genders in STEM are damning. What can K-12 schools do to play their part in preparing the next generation for a talent-hungry workforce?
Author Recent PostsErin Werra, Content Writer & Strategist, Skyward’s Advancing K12 blogErin Werra is a content writer and strategist at Skyward’s Advancing K12 blog. Her writing about K12 edtech, data, security, and leadership has appeared in THE Journal, District Administration, and eSchool News. She enjoys delving into details about K12 edtech, leadership, security, data, and social-emotional learning. When she’s not writing about edtech, she’s waxing poetic about motherhood, personality traits, and self-growth. Email: erinwe@skyward.comTwitter: @erinwerraLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/erin-werra-79352b2a/ Latest posts by eSchool Media Contributors (see all)
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