Team:TrinityCollegeDublin/GenderInequality
Gender Inequality
WHAT IS THIS?
A comprehensive study of gender (in)equality in Malaria. When observing Malaria’s epidemiological facts, we found that women and men are not always affected equally. The origins of this difference happened to be mainly cultural. This brought us to self-reflect on our world of Science & Engineering as well as our community here at Trinity College, Dublin. We used a quantitative approach: a database was gathered to depict sex ratio in Trinity’s academic staff as well as students.IN SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING
As much as we would like to see even numbers of representatives of each gender in any work place, fields of engineering, science, technology and mathematics are not those places-not yet anyway. Why is that so? We will look at some global statistics as well as statistics from our own college to seek an answer to this question. General picture:- Women earn less than men.
- Ten years ago 47% of new entrants into maths, science and computing courses at university level were women. However, the number has fallen down to 40% by 2013.
- Less than 7% of positions in technology in Europe are occupied by women.
- Women account for 39% of all academic staff in College, but only 22% of academics in the Faculty of Engineering, Maths & Science (Annual Equality Monitoring Report 2011-12).
- At present, 8 out of the 25 Heads of School in College are women.
- At Professor and Associate Professor Level, the School of Linguistic, Speech & Communication Sciences has 25% women, while the School of Medicine fares slightly better at 37%.
- However, 4 Schools achieve a 50/50 balance among these senior positions. They are the School of Education, School of Law, School of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, and the School of Social Work and Social Sciences.