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Making Gains for Women in STEM Fields Will Take More Effort

From left, Kristine Naltchadjian, Véna Arielle Ahouansou, Alejandra Estanislao and Prue Mackenzie last week at the 2018 Global Women’s Forum in Paris.Credit...Women’s Forum/Sipa Press

PARIS — If the world of STEM is looking for more women role models, Véna Arielle Ahouansou and Alejandra Estanislao are candidates.

Both are young and have degrees in a field involving science, technology, engineering or mathematics — the disciplines where women are significantly underrepresented.

Dr. Ahouansou, 25, has a medical degree from her native Benin, a small West African country. Two years ago she parlayed that into a start up, Kea Medicals, that has created electronic patient record management software that is now available in five African countries.

Ms. Estanislao, 31, originally from Venezuela, also wanted to be a doctor but got a degree in mathematics and finance at a top French engineering school, and she is now a software engineer at Google in Paris.

Both women spoke at the 2018 Global Meeting of the Women’s Forum for the Economy and Society last week, and said they aware that they are the exceptions to the rule.

“It wasn’t so bad at the engineering faculty, where we were about 25 percent,” Ms. Estanislao said. “It was later, at work. When you find yourself one woman in a room of 30 people, that is when you feel lonely.”

Dr. Ahouansou, whose company employs 15 people, said men still have a blind spot — not about women in management, but about women in technology. “They need to change their mind-set that science is just for them,” she said.

No one disputes these days that STEM remains mostly a man’s world. Much has been written about the male geek culture that dominates Silicon Valley and other technology hubs. But numerous speakers at the conference agreed that needs to change soon if women are to adjust to fast-changing job markets that increasingly require technological skills, or scientific proficiency.

“This is one of the most important issues of our time, and it is urgent,” said Lindsey Nefesh-Clarke, founder of W4, an organization that promotes girls and women in technology. “It has nothing to do with cognitive abilities, that has been proven. It is about consistent, deeply entrenched stereotypes.”

The stubborn gap between men and women in STEM is evident from an early age, and continues through university to the workplace, according to “Bridging the Digital Gender Divide,” a report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (O.E.C.D.) released in October.

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Participants of the Women’s Forum at an event hosted by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development at the organization’’s headquarters.Credit...Women’s Forum/Sipa Press

The study found that in the developed world, women account for just 25 percent of graduates in information and communications technology, and 24 percent in engineering — even though women outnumber men in graduate schools over all.

According to a 2017 Unesco report, female student enrollment is particularly low in information and communications technology (ICT) at 3 percent. It is 5 percent in natural science, mathematics and statistics and 8 percent in manufacturing and construction. The highest is in health and welfare at 15 percent.

The implications of a digital gender divide multiply on the global scale. Most of the 3.9 billion people in the world who are off line are women; in Africa, only 12 percent of women are online and in the developing world, women’s access to the internet is 25 percent below that of men.

As jobs change around the world, technology — and the flexibility it promises — could offer women a chance to choose how, when and where they work. But these opportunities are lost without the skills to access them, which is why many said at the global women’s forum, in which The New York Times is a partner, that giving women the skills to master technology is a social, moral and economic necessity.

“Fixing that is the right thing to do,” Ms. Estanislao said.

The time to encourage girls to develop an interest in math and sciences is between the ages of 11 and 15, said Shelley McKinley, general manager for technology and corporate responsibility at Microsoft, speaking at another conference event. She cited a recent study conducted in the United States that showed the gap in interest in STEM fields between boys and girls increased from 6.1 to 9.4 percent in those years.

“What the study found is that girls want more role models,” Ms. McKinley said. “Where are the women STEM teachers? Girls are more interested in hands-on experience; they want to see the life applications of what they are learning. We need to focus on this.”

Angel Gurria, Secretary General of the O.E.C.D., speaking at an opening event at the organization’s headquarters, said a recent effort in his native Mexico — “macho Mexico” as he put it — to expose girls in high schools to celebrated women in science and technology has had a positive affect. But, he acknowledged, fighting stereotypes is an uphill battle.

“They happen naturally, starting in families,” he said. “Parents often don’t have enough information. We are fighting centuries and centuries of tradition and culture.” One answer, some experts say, is to encourage paternity leave after the birth of a child, which allows their wives to keep working, and the men to become more involved in family life and to offer their daughters in particular another role model at home.

Paternity leave has been catching on in some countries, particularly those facing a declining birthrate and an aging population, as a way to encourage women to stay in the work force.

“Paternity leave is a key tool available to government to change behavior,” said Willem Adema, a senior economist at the O.E.C.D. In Iceland, for instance, men’s share of available parental leave has increased from 3 percent to around 30 percent, according to a recent study.

In Iceland and elsewhere, fathers’ share of paid leave dipped during the financial crisis, as men stayed at work to boost the family income.

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Gabriela Ramos, chief of staff at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.Credit...Women’s Forum/Sipa Press

But in many countries, cultural biases can trump even the most progressive legislation. Generous paternal leave policies in Japan and Korea are rarely used for both economic and cultural reasons, Mr. Adema said.

In Russia, legislation that allows fathers to take up to three years off after the birth of a child is widely shunned, according to Svetlana Lukash, a member of Russia’s presidential staff. “It is still badly perceived by society,” she said.

According to O.E.C.D. statistics, women are still eight times more likely to care for children than men, even though 86 percent of men agree they should do more to share the burden at home. As several speakers admitted, attitudes toward shared responsibilities at home have changed, but behavior has not.

“We need to make the women’s agenda a family agenda,” said Gabriela Ramos, chief of staff at the O.E.C.D.

Attracting girls and women to STEM studies is just one issue. Another, perhaps more significant, is encouraging them to stay the course. “It is all about retention,” Ms. Estanislao said. “It is useless to bring in women if you can’t keep them.”

According to Ms. Nefesh-Clarke, more than 50 percent of women in information and communications technology, or ICT, leave, mainly because of a hostile environment. That helps explain why women hold only 3 percent of the top management jobs in ICT, she said.

“We can’t just address the external pipeline,” she said later. “We have to address the internal pipeline, and why it is leaking. What is it about the culture of ICT that makes women not want to stay?”

According to a study by the Center for Talent Innovation, women in tech jobs in the United States leave the field at a 45 percent higher rate than men. Only 27 percent in one survey cited family as a primary reason for leaving.

A new danger is that the low level of women’s participation in STEM may become self replicating. A number of speakers at the three-day forum noted that women are woefully underrepresented in the high-tech start-up world. Only 9 percent of apps are created by women; 10 percent of innovative start-ups were founded by women; and women-only teams account for just 6 percent of popular open source programming language for data analysis.

In other words, all-male teams are writing algorithms that reflect their attitudes and biases, which inadvertently or not can exclude women.

“Algorithms are built by humans,” said Emanuela Aureli, of Spencer Stuart, a consulting firm. “If women don’t participate in their creation, they won’t have a voice.” Pronouns flagging the sex of applicants have been found inserted in job search programs, she said.

“The message is we should not reproduce the biases and stereotypes of the analog world,” said Ms. Ramos, the chief of staff of the O.E.C.D.

A correction was made on 
Nov. 28, 2018

An earlier version of this article misstated the number of women in information and communications technology who leave, mainly because of a hostile environment. It is 50 percent of women, not 50 women.

How we handle corrections

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section B, Page 2 of the New York edition with the headline: Breaking the Cycles That Keep Women Out of Tech-Related Professions. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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