Women, Work and Computing

Computer Programming Used To Be Women’s Work

And what can be done about all this? While touching on all of these questions, these two books look primarily at why relatively few women are involved in computer science education and work.

The First Women in Tech Didn’t Leave—Men Pushed Them Out - WSJ

In both cases, the answer is clear that the basic problems are not found in any "deficiencies" in girls and women such as fear of technology or disinterest. Rather, the problems are in the culture of computing. The authors conclude that basic changes will need to come through internal responsibility for the problems and changes in the institutional culture.

The material in Women, Work and Computing is both less and more than its title might indicate.

The focus is on women working in a large international software organization, that is, women in the business of software development, consultancy, and systems integration services. It [End Page ] is an ethnographic study of gender relations in this particular culture, based in the United Kingdom.

The Current State of Women in Computer Science

It is not a study of women who use computers and computing skills for their work in other areas. Thus, the book is not a study of how computers and computing are changing the work of women, their training, their job possibilities, and earnings, as the title might suggest. However, Woodfield, a sociologist, not only reports on an empirical study in a software company, but places her analysis in the larger context of British and American research on gender and spatial and temporal disruption, computer-mediated communication, and online gender-bending.

She uses her data and her review of many other studies to test the optimistic predictions of those who argue that despite the fact that the computer culture has been a domain of masculinity, computers offer a fundamental and dramatic social change for the future of women. Those who would suggest the possibility of a more genderless universe through new uses of computers argue that the screen allows us to renegotiate old relationships, permitting and encouraging rethinking about our bodies, gender identification, space, time, and historic social inequalities in ways that can have an enduring effect on individuals and society.

Focusing on the employees of an international company, the author uses interviews and the resultant observations of male and female employees to test this argument. Not only is the company considered a leader in its field, but it is known for an official ideology of being a "people company," where promotion is based on a meritocracy with a worker's gender considered irrelevant.

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What Woodfield discovered was that the pathways and successes of the men and the women through the company differed. While the official discourse of meritocracy was well accepted, and provided a framework for talk about the company and for assessments, this company creed did not guarantee equal recognition of women's skills. Even in the computer age, the conclusion argues, blurring gender lines is impossible in regard to male supervisors' evaluations of employees' abilities. Knowledge continues to be constructed as something that men have. Gender discourse in human resources.

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A Brief History of Women in Computing

The Journal of Popular Culture, Vol. Information Technology for Development, Vol. Women, work and Web 2. Developing a corporeal cyberfeminism: Cambridge University Press Online publication date: September Print publication year: Sociology , Sociology of Gender , Organisational Sociology. Export citation Recommend to librarian Recommend this book.

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Cambridge Core - Organisational Sociology - Women, Work and Computing - by Ruth Woodfield. In an article titled “The Computer Girls,” the magazine described the field as offering better job opportunities for women than many other.

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