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- University / College
OsnabrĂĽck University of Applied Sciences
in OsnabrĂĽck, Germany -
- University / College
University of Delaware
in Newark, United States -
- Consulting / Legal Firm, Private Company / Industry
SNC Lavalin
in Montréal, Canada -
- Publisher
Springer Nature
in Heidelberg, Germany -
- University / College
Johns Hopkins University
in Baltimore, United States -
- University / College
Texas A&M University
in College Station, United States -
- University / College
Griffith University
in Southport, Australia -
- University / College
University of Kassel
in Kassel, Germany -
- University / College
ITESM - Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education
in Monterrey, Mexico -
- University / College
Arizona State University
in Tempe, United States -
- University / College
University of Pisa
in Pisa, Italy -
- University / College
Columbia University
in New York City, United States -
- University / College
Stanford School of Engineering, Stanford University
in Stanford, United States -
- Blog Post
- Posted 5 years ago
More women are starting careers in engineering - but it still isn't enough
Recently, more and more attention has been paid to the gender imbalance in industries that have traditionally been very male-dominated. Engineering is no exception to this rule. In the past, engineering has been associated with technical, dirty and often physical work, and therefore a job for men. However, as gender stereotypes are broken down and the industry changes, we are seeing breakthroughs in the number of women who are looking to make careers out of engineering. But the numbers still aren’t high enough.
Pagination