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Attract More and Diverse Students to Your CS Courses

Attract More and Diverse Students to Your CS Courses. Joanne Cohoon, UVA & NCWIT. June 25, 2013. The Big Picture. What’s the problem? Stereotype threat What you can do Actively recruit Minimize stereotype threat Use messages that attract females Resources.

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Attract More and Diverse Students to Your CS Courses

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  1. Attract More and Diverse Students to Your CS Courses Joanne Cohoon, UVA & NCWIT June 25, 2013

  2. The Big Picture • What’s the problem? • Stereotype threat • What you can do • Actively recruit • Minimize stereotype threat • Use messages that attract females • Resources

  3. BLS Projected 2020 Occupational employment for jobs requiring college degree only CS

  4. 30% of jobs for college grads will be in computing

  5. There is not enough low hanging fruit We need to branch out

  6. Recruit from the majority

  7. Stand up if your class is ≥40% girls

  8. Why so few females?

  9. Stereotypes & Stereotype Threat Affect Technical Students

  10. Common Stereotype: Feminine ≠ Technical Lagesen 2005

  11. Stereotypes can feel threatening • Fear of confirming negative beliefs about my group … • Hinders performance • Affects choices and aspirations • Leads to harsh personal standards, opting out if not met • Correll 2004; Chasteen et al. 2005

  12. Some triggers Gender imbalance in room Stereotyped physical space Attention called to gender Stereotype Threat: Easy to Trigger; Affects Motivated Students

  13. Stereotype Threat Masks Ability • Remove threat and women test better • Advanced calculus course with 100 male, 57 female students • No gender difference in course grades • Significant difference in test performance without threat • Good, Aronson, Harder, 2008

  14. Stereotype Threat Reduces Learning and Persistence • Note-taking skill reduced by stereotype threat • Feelings of belonging impaired • Appel et al. 2011; Good et al. 2012

  15. Stereotype Threat has subtle negative effects too • Don’t speak up in groups or classes • Reluctant to take leadership roles • Discount their performance

  16. Actively Recruit using messages that counter stereotypes without repeating them

  17. Gender balance in room Create a welcoming physicalspace Do not call attention to gender Avoid triggering stereotype threat

  18. Capitalize on how we choose our occupations

  19. Ignite your students’ interest

  20. Showcase projects tied to current & future interests

  21. Exhibits, Posters, Guest Speakers • Link to girls’ existing interests & ambitions • Robots saving lives, cute • Take every opportunity to recruit • Joint projects • Photos on posters • People rather than things

  22. Describe careers that spark women’s interest • Flexibility: industry, geography • Socially relevant • Work with others • Time with family • Job projections • High salaries • Satisfied professionals

  23. Computing offers exciting work that affects our world and the people in it • Create technology for • Tracking endangered dolphins • Mobile forensics labs for instant analysis at crime scenes • GPS systems that guide blind people • Scanning DNA for childhood diseases • Designing and displaying new fashions • Restoring and preserving art work Source: dotdiva.org

  24. Computer Scientists give back to their communities • Technology for human rights • Design secure databases to record human rights abuses while shielding the identities of victims or witnesses • Create tools that help ordinary people collect extraordinary amounts of money for important causes

  25. Best Jobs in America 2011 • Software Engineer • Mathematician • Actuary • Statistician • Computer Systems Analyst • According to CareerCast

  26. Computer Scientists work in every industry Source: dotdiva.org

  27. Computing occupations are well paid Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)

  28. Build confidence • Showcase successes of current & former students • “You’d be great at this” • Provide opportunities for experiencing success • Describe how the course promotes success

  29. The effort to master difficult material actually increases intellectual ability Emphasize Growth in Intelligence See Carol Dweck’s work

  30. Don’t mistake confidence for ability

  31. Promote belonging, inclusivity • Recruit in groups • Have friends recruit friends • Use inclusive language • Set-up a welcoming physical environment • Tell them you want them to study computing

  32. Describe opportunities for Community service Conference attendance Poster presentation Outreach projects (Really, developing the identity of a computing expert)

  33. Remember • Cultivate students’ • Interest • Confidence • Belonging • Identity

  34. May actually create stereotypes Once implanted, difficult to dislodge Avoid mythbusting, geeks, cubicles, code monkeys, … “I’ve heard that before so it must be true” See “How Warnings about False Claims Become Recommendations” www.acrwebsite.org/topic.asp?artid=250

  35. Reach out! • Develop media, e.g., posters, announcements, videos • Show up at orientation / elective fairs • Current students talk to prospective students • Clubs • Advisors, other teachers, principals • Parents

  36. NCWIT Award for Aspirations in Computing ncwit.org/award

  37. Advisors can deliver the message • Provide them with up-to-date information

  38. Seth’s Story • Excellent teacher in a failing high school • 12% girls in AP CS • Actively recruited Yearbook and Student Government • Explained and demonstrated the value of CS • Assured students they would succeed • 33% girls in AP CS + highest enrollment ever • New school – even greater success (39% in AP CS) • Moral – Active recruiting works

  39. BeforeAfter

  40. 2009-2010 AP Computer Science 1st Year at Lake Brantley about 60 AP Computer Science students

  41. Lake Brantley High School 2011 - 2012 144 students in AP Computer Science 45 % female .5 % mascot

  42. 2012-2013 at Lake Brantley HS OVER 300 AP Computer Science Students 40% female

  43. Time Out for Brainstorming Generate three ideas for how you will actively recruit female students to your computing class

  44. NCWIT is the National Center for Women & Information Technology Mobilizing for Change: NCWIT Our coalition includes more than 250 universities, corporations, and non-profits.

  45. Free Resources to Help You Inform Others Statistics about computing education and workforce in your area www.ncwit.org/edjobsmap

  46. Finally • Track and report your outcomes

  47. Questions or comments?

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