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April 19, 2007
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Women in science: Good news, bad newsSymposium discusses progress, obstacles in career pathsBy Ruth WalkerSpecial to Harvard News Office It is the best of times, and it is the worst of times. At Harvard’s fourth National Symposium on the Advancement of Women in Science, it was clear why female scientists need to keep meeting like this. The proportions of women in many scientific fields, notably computer science, are not just low but falling. Some major funding organizations have done little to advance the cause of women in science. And work-at-home scientists, even those on the cutting edge of space exploration, still have to explain to their husbands at the end of the day why the children’s toys are strewn all over the living room. On the other hand, participants described field after field as being in a “golden age” of one kind or another. Marion Blakey, head of the Federal Aviation Administration and keynote speaker at the symposium (April 13-15), used that phrase to describe both the nation’s air safety status and the degree of activity going on to “reinvent” aviation as traffic pushes relentlessly past 700 million passengers a year. Sara Seager, assistant professor of planetary science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), described her field, the study of extrasolar planets, as “truly a frontier,” and noted, “Every month there’s a new press release” on another planet discovered. And even in a mature field like computer science, there are many open problems to study, as Ruzena Bajcsy of the University of California, Berkeley, said, noting, “When I started in the computer field, the computer that you now have on your PDA filled a whole room.” Frances Allen, an IBM Fellow Emerita at the T.J. Watson Research Laboratory and the first female winner of the Association for Computing Machinery’s Turing Award, offered an explanation for the level of participation by women in her field. When she was starting out in the 1950s, in the early days of computers, before there was a field of computer science, programming was open to people, including women, from a wide range of backgrounds. But as the field matured and became more structured in the 1960s, industry began requiring its new hires to have engineering degrees. That tended to shut out women. “The workplace changed immensely. And in my view, the field has not recovered since.” She called the number of women in the field a “tragedy” because of the need for “diversity of opinion and knowledge and information and points of view” to solve scientific problems. Among the pieces of advice given
n The value of pursuing leadership positions: Lucy Sanders, co-founder and CEO of the National Center for Women and Information Technology, described herself as a “reluctant leader” when she first was offered an opportunity to move up the ladder at Bell Labs. “It’s scary, because a leader is vulnerable to criticism. There’s opportunity for tremendous failure and risk taking. … But leadership is very creative. It’s a great deal of fun. Something that will force you to learn new skills. It will make you a better communicator, better at lateral thinking. Leadership can be learned … . Please, please go after leadership positions.” The symposium, sponsored by Harvard’s Women in Science at Harvard-Radcliffe, featured 38 speakers; attendance at the sessions included about 20 graduate students and 70 to 80 undergraduates, of whom about 10 were from off campus, according to Vinita Alexander ’07, conference director. A group of about 15 high school girls from New Hampshire took part as well. |
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© 2007 The President and Fellows of Harvard College |
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