The participation rates of girls in post-compulsory information technology courses of Australian universities and high schools have remained low (less than 30%), despite three decades of research and analysis. In seeking to better understand this phenomenon, this paper draws upon data collected during an Australian Research Council Linkage project to investigate first, the reasons that teachers and students in contemporary Australian high schools put forward to account for girls\u27 underrepresentation; second, the assumptions about gender that underpin these explanations; and third, the extent to which teachers appear able to respond to the full range of factors shaping girls\u27 decision making. The paper argues that attempts to improve g...
Statistics have shown that those girls who choose to study the traditionally male areas of Design an...
To make the most of the information age, you need to be male, speak English and live in an industria...
While the issue of boys’ dominance of the curriculum has a long history, the article examines ...
Participation in post-compulsory computing education has declined over recent years, both in the sen...
Years after the introduction of computing in Australian schools, computer classrooms are still heavi...
This paper examines the implications for teacher educators of the dominant beliefs currently circula...
Despite significant efforts and many intervention programs over the years to encourage girls to stud...
Since the early eighties, the gender biased choices of young people entering the later stages of sch...
[Abstract]: The low level of participation by females in ICT education, training and employment has ...
Despite expanding ICT job opportunities, there has been a decrease in the proportion of girls enteri...
Executive summary Computer education, with a focus on Computer Science, has become a core subject ...
AbstractEducationists believe that one of the causes of boys’ underachievement is the dominance of f...
‘Pipeline shrinkage’, the steady attrition of women in the ICT industry despite their academic achie...
In the 1980s, gender issues and a focus on girls’ and young women's participation in SET was a signi...
'Pipeline shrinkage', the steady attrition of women in the ICT industry despite their academic achie...
Statistics have shown that those girls who choose to study the traditionally male areas of Design an...
To make the most of the information age, you need to be male, speak English and live in an industria...
While the issue of boys’ dominance of the curriculum has a long history, the article examines ...
Participation in post-compulsory computing education has declined over recent years, both in the sen...
Years after the introduction of computing in Australian schools, computer classrooms are still heavi...
This paper examines the implications for teacher educators of the dominant beliefs currently circula...
Despite significant efforts and many intervention programs over the years to encourage girls to stud...
Since the early eighties, the gender biased choices of young people entering the later stages of sch...
[Abstract]: The low level of participation by females in ICT education, training and employment has ...
Despite expanding ICT job opportunities, there has been a decrease in the proportion of girls enteri...
Executive summary Computer education, with a focus on Computer Science, has become a core subject ...
AbstractEducationists believe that one of the causes of boys’ underachievement is the dominance of f...
‘Pipeline shrinkage’, the steady attrition of women in the ICT industry despite their academic achie...
In the 1980s, gender issues and a focus on girls’ and young women's participation in SET was a signi...
'Pipeline shrinkage', the steady attrition of women in the ICT industry despite their academic achie...
Statistics have shown that those girls who choose to study the traditionally male areas of Design an...
To make the most of the information age, you need to be male, speak English and live in an industria...
While the issue of boys’ dominance of the curriculum has a long history, the article examines ...