Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Education

Caltech's Latest STEM Breakthrough: Most of Its New Students Are Women (latimes.com) 254

Bruce66423 shares a report from the Los Angeles Times: In a milestone breakthrough, more than half of Caltech's incoming undergraduate class this fall will be women (source paywalled; alternative source) for the first time in its 133-year history. The class of 113 women and 109 men comes 50 years after Caltech graduated its first class of undergraduate women, who were admitted in 1970. "What this means for young women is that we are a place that can be representative of them and their experiences ... where they can grow and thrive and excel and become really impressive, extraordinary scientists and engineers and go on to make a difference in this really research-heavy profession," said Ashley Pallie, dean of admissions

Gloria L. Blackwell, chief executive of the American Assn. of University Women, lauded Caltech's achievement as critical progress in reducing the substantial gap of women in science, technology, engineering and math. Although women hold about 60% of degrees in biological sciences, they represent only about 18% in computer science and 20% in engineering, Blackwell said. Research has shown that boys are not better at math and science than girls, but a persistent message in society says otherwise -- and especially discourages Latinas and Black girls from pursuing the fields because they face discrimination and have less access to role models, resources and opportunities, the AAUW says.
The report notes that Caltech isn't the first educational institution to reach gender parity in STEM. Harvey Mudd College, a small private institution in Claremont, "enrolled more women than men in 2010 for the first time in its history and in 2014 graduated more women than men in engineering," reports the LA Times. "Today, women make up 52.8% of majors in computer science, 50.5% in engineering and 68.2% in mathematical and computational biology."

UC Berkeley is another powerful producer of STEM graduates, with "nearly half of students majoring in those fields [identifying] as women or nonbinary." However, the report notes that the field they enter varies significantly. "They make up more than two-thirds of students in biological and biomedical sciences, but about one-third in engineering, computer and informational sciences, and mathematics and statistics."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Caltech's Latest STEM Breakthrough: Most of Its New Students Are Women

Comments Filter:
  • by GFS666 ( 6452674 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @08:56PM (#64741956)
    What the headline should have said is that "High Schools are Finally Graduating Enough Qualified Female Candidates to Meet CalTechs Undergraduate Qualifications". And there is now a much greater chance that they will actually graduate with a degree in 4-5 years time. This is good. That is much more important than the number admitted. I know of what I speak. I have a friend who went to Caltech manyyyyy years ago and when he was there Caltech purposely lowered the entrance requirements for women so as to admit more of them. As a result, they had a massively greater dropout percentage than the men, which in the long term did them no good and Caltech no good.
    • I'm not sure how you came to that conclusion. The article didn't state this is a graduating class, but rather the incoming undergraduate class. For all we know they just let in more women who may possibly dropout or change majors. I am not stating that it will happen or is likely to happen, just that the article doesn't seem to make any statement of the quality of the incoming class or the rigors of the entrance process. But I hope you are correct.

    • "High Schools are Finally Graduating Enough Qualified Female Candidates to Meet CalTechs Undergraduate Qualifications".

      False. More women than men have been entering college/university AND graduating than men for some time now [forbes.com].

      Nationwide, women comprised 58% of all college students in 2020, up from 56.6% six years earlier. Women have outnumbered men among college students for decades, but the gap continues to widen. In 1979, about 200,000 more women were enrolled in college than men. By 2021, that difference had grown to about 3.1 million more women than men in college.

      What this shows is for all the bullshit people like you spout, women are just as good as men in STEM, and other fields, when they're not prevented from attending due to sexism. If you doubt that, think of how many men right now are telling women their only role is to be barefoot and

    • by kick6 ( 1081615 )

      What the headline should have said is that "High Schools are Finally Graduating Enough Qualified Female Candidates to Meet CalTechs Undergraduate Qualifications". And there is now a much greater chance that they will actually graduate with a degree in 4-5 years time. This is good. That is much more important than the number admitted. I know of what I speak. I have a friend who went to Caltech manyyyyy years ago and when he was there Caltech purposely lowered the entrance requirements for women so as to admit more of them. As a result, they had a massively greater dropout percentage than the men, which in the long term did them no good and Caltech no good.

      Is it that high school is stepping up it's game, or is it that caltech is stepping down both it's admissions and curriculum game. Your anecdote does not prove it's the former.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      What the headline should have said is that "High Schools are Finally Graduating Enough Qualified Female Candidates to Meet CalTechs Undergraduate Qualifications". And there is now a much greater chance that they will actually graduate with a degree in 4-5 years time. This is good. That is much more important than the number admitted. I know of what I speak. I have a friend who went to Caltech manyyyyy years ago and when he was there Caltech purposely lowered the entrance requirements for women so as to admit more of them. As a result, they had a massively greater dropout percentage than the men, which in the long term did them no good and Caltech no good.

      For years I assumed that the brain of a woman was perfectly equal in capability. Until I was introduced to the fact that we separate men and women in chess competition.

      Perhaps those still assuming can explain why gender separation in competition requiring only the mind, has been validated. Don’t pull out your Troll label. Debate it intelligently, and assume I’m not fully convinced.

      • by RobinH ( 124750 )
        Average IQ between males and females is essentially equal, and has been since we started testing. However, males and females do score differently on subtests, with males scoring higher on spatial ability, and females generally scoring higher on verbal ability. Also male and female nervous systems tend to be different, most notably eye structure (male eyes are more adapted to detect motion, where female eyes are more adapted to variations in color and texture). There is also a "variation hypothesis" which
      • we separate men and women in chess

        It has nothing to do with ability in chess. It's because few women were interested in chess, and the chess competition organizers wanted to grow the game and give girls a chance to see women have success, and to highlight the notion that chess can be fun and interesting for everyone.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      There is another effect, at least with respect to grad students. I was asst. dir. of a Uni lab once. The men would work alone and did not talk much among themselves about their research. The women were very social with each other and would talk among themselves about their research. If an environment is not welcoming to women, they avoid it (big surprise). There are teams of researchers out there, but I suspect the men have cut out their little pieces of the pie and work on those. I suspect women to be much

    • by drnb ( 2434720 )

      I have a friend who went to Caltech manyyyyy years ago and when he was there Caltech purposely lowered the entrance requirements for women so as to admit more of them. As a result, they had a massively greater dropout percentage than the men.

      Perhaps from the universities perspective. However some of those women considered their college career a success, they earned their MRS degree. And how did I learn about this degree, from a friend's wife. Turns out it is a common joke among women due to its underlying core truth.

  • So the males at Caltech have a higher average brightness than previous years males? I mean, logically .. given no weirdness. Assumption being instead of taking the top 2% of males they only had spots for the top 1%.

  • who and what you let in.

    Question is, is this (small) class coming at the expense of a sausage fest somewhere else. And you know what? It probably does.

    • Given that most college attendees are women these days, it's called 'people not going to college', which poses a problem because it means that we have overshot the goal.
      It also makes for a bunch of dating problems because women on average don't date down on things like height, income, education, etc...

      • Given that most college attendees are women these days,

        58% are women nationwide.

        But the better the school, the more men.

        it's called 'people not going to college'

        It's also called "demographic collapse". Birthrates have been declining for decades, and fewer people are in those age ranges.

        Restrictions on foreigners attending American colleges are making the situation even worse.

        • I don't object to getting more men into lower rated schools, more into education.

          But 58% women implied 42% men, which is a 16% spread - It means that there are roughly 1.4 women for every man in the average college.

      • Yeah that's why narcc still hasn't lost his virginity. That and his really bad napoleon complex.

  • The main problem is that the colleges don't tell you what to study or do to get in. They'll take kids who start non-profits, or some other extra-curricular BS. Why can't they just have an entrance exam, project show & tell, and an essay? I get it .. being able to sit exams doesn't mean you're bright .. but then starting a non-profit with your ultra-wealthy dad doesn't mean you're bright either. That's why I am saying an exam, a project show & tell .. where you build or create some shit and then you

  • Skimmed the article but couldn't find anything explaining why this is finally happening. More women interested in STEM? Caltech accepting more women applicants?
    • Don't know but I hope that their admissions team kept a level playing field when deciding on who actually gets in. Cal Tech is incredibly hard to get in on the order of only 3% of applicants are admitted. It certainly wouldn't do to accept someone based on sex or ethnicity only to have them wash out in a year or two because the academics were just too tough. If these new entrants have the right stuff to succeed, and I think they probably do, then I wish them great success.

  • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @09:46PM (#64742030)
    Its great to hear the women are outscoring the men on GPA and admissions standardized testing and earned this great achievement.
    • by sfcat ( 872532 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @10:00PM (#64742070)
      They didn't. The just stopped looking at test scores. The consequence of this is that the degree no longer has the weight it used to. It was the high standards that made it valuable. Get rid of that, the value leaves too. Didn't you notice that fresh graduates no longer know what they did when you went to school? That's not an accident. Its a consequence of the changes that make this possible.
      • The consequence of this is that the degree no longer has the weight it used to.

        It takes a true idiot to judge a degree based on the GPA cut-off of the applicant. It's something that isn't even remotely considered by any rankings of university. Imaging defining your life and career based on a test you took 6 years prior. Imaging thinking that one moment in your life can dictate your knowledge or intelligence for the future. It would be truly absurd.

        • The consequence of this is that the degree no longer has the weight it used to.

          It takes a true idiot to judge a degree based on the GPA cut-off of the applicant. It's something that isn't even remotely considered by any rankings of university. Imaging defining your life and career based on a test you took 6 years prior. Imaging thinking that one moment in your life can dictate your knowledge or intelligence for the future. It would be truly absurd.

          Funny anecdote, in my early career not having a degree was kind of a big deal and made it more difficult to get into my field, though with years of experience they don't even ask for a degree anymore and I eventually dropped my associate's off my resume entirely in favor of having more room to list relevant experience.

          Anyhoo, many of the interviews I am involved with now, we neither require nor check for degrees, because they have become so ubiquitous and their value so variable that they are no longer a re

      • by drnb ( 2434720 )

        They didn't. The just stopped looking at test scores. The consequence of this is that the degree no longer has the weight it used to.

        No. Unless the coursework is changed the degree will be the same. What happens if unprepared students are admitted is that the graduation rate declines.

  • by hambone142 ( 2551854 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @09:48PM (#64742044)

    We went out of our way to hire women EEs at my company (some of our CEOs, etc were female FWIW). What I found was very few stayed in hardware design. The number of hours necessary to work mostly caused them to leave. It was a very "woman friendly" company for the naysayers. R&D manager was also a woman.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

      The number of hours necessary to work mostly caused them to leave. It was a very "woman friendly" company for the naysayers.

      Literally every company which has a problem says they are friendly and then blame the problem itself. Corporate culture doesn't care who your boss is. I've worked for some truly horrible women who have bred a culture of sexism in the department (favouring males). Your comment has a bit in common with the "I can't be a racist, my friend is black" line of thinking.

      The idea that women just don't want to work is absurd. It sounds like you have a certain company culture or departmental culture you either can't o

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      That just tells us that it was a toxic place to work, with too few staff to do the needed work, resulting in long hours.

      Men shouldn't put up with it either, they are just hurting themselves by staying.

    • This implies they also went out of their way to overlook qualified men. Such equality!
    • Was it paid overtime or were they just not ok with getting ripped off?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 27, 2024 @09:49PM (#64742046)

    What is Caltech going to do to make up for that kind of inequality?
    Because which white men decided that queers can't have a major in quantum science or subatomic nuclear fusion physics?

  • Research has shown that boys are not better at math and science than girls, but a persistent message in society says otherwise

    The first half of that sentence is true, the latter-half is highly specious opinion. Fact is and on the whole, boys prefer the soft sciences whilst women prefer the soft sciences. Someone should do research as to why so many males are leaving higher education and in such numbers.
    • Typo: "Fact is and on the whole, boys prefer the hard sciences whilst women prefer the soft sciences"
    • Backend up by what exactly?

    • Research has shown that boys are not better at math and science than girls, but a persistent message in society says otherwise” The first half of that sentence is true, the latter-half is highly specious opinion. Fact is and on the whole, boys prefer the soft sciences whilst women prefer the soft sciences. Someone should do research as to why so many males are leaving higher education and in such numbers.

      Working in academia - I can give a good first clue - men are marginalized on campus. This is not a safe place for males, as you can be kicked out if a woman wants you to be. Just claim that you sexually harassed her. Or regret sex is a big one as well. What is more, Sexual harassment has been re-defined to the point that it doesn't need to have one thing to do with sex. Our Gender studies Sexual Harassment counselor told me that if you tell a woman that you like her earrings, that is sexual harassment, in

  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Wednesday August 28, 2024 @12:18AM (#64742306) Homepage

    It's an odd achievement to be proud of. Last I looked, something like 60% of college students were women. That is a huge gap, and if it were the other way around, equal rights groups would be screaming.

    • It's an odd achievement to be proud of. Last I looked, something like 60% of college students were women. That is a huge gap, and if it were the other way around, equal rights groups would be screaming.

      It’s because the mainstream position is not to remove the system or toxic dominance and to treat everyone on an equal basis, it’s to reverse the roles and keep the toxic system in place to “punish people who took advantage and keep things equal” when the reality is the very few old white men who instigated the system were and are never penalized and instead it’s foisted upon an entirely different generation because that’s who they have power over.

  • by esperto ( 3521901 ) on Wednesday August 28, 2024 @05:17AM (#64742568)

    It is telling that the article commemorates the achievement of over 50% of women in STEM at caltech and at the same time says that women represent 60% in biological sciences and 68% in mathematical and computational biology and doesn't address it saying they need more men, none of them seem to be really about equality when on area skewed the other way around are completely ignored or even defended as a stronghold for women.

    I'm very cynical about the people who are defending the policy of getting women in STEM field, they do not care about true representation/equality but are just pushed by agendas that just want more candidates to the jobs to reduce salaries of high paying engineering jobs to keep more money at the top, they just see that basically half of the potential population is not interested in the field and are just as capable, so having them enter the job market would increase the pool of candidates and reduce salaries.

  • Has anybody consulted a biologist? (Or a supreme court justice?)
    • Has anybody consulted a biologist? (Or a supreme court justice?)

      No matter her qualifications, the moment that Jackson answered in that manner, it was 100% clear that she was a political choice and an insult to women everywhere. If you want to get more diversity at the bench that is fine, no problem there, but they need to be AT LEAST as qualified and intelligent as the existing members, preferably more so. Jackson and Sotomayor are both the worst type of diversity hire.

      • Has anybody consulted a biologist? (Or a supreme court justice?)

        No matter her qualifications, the moment that Jackson answered in that manner, it was 100% clear that she was a political choice and an insult to women everywhere. If you want to get more diversity at the bench that is fine, no problem there, but they need to be AT LEAST as qualified and intelligent as the existing members, preferably more so. Jackson and Sotomayor are both the worst type of diversity hire.

        It's the effort to destroy meritocracy, to be replaced with equal outcomes, and not equitable outcomes.

  • Would they celebrate? Men are being discounted just about everywhere in developed countries. This is not a good thing.

    Much of higher education is dominated by women now anyway.

  • Exploding head would probably be most apropos.
  • Big difference between if they are talking about accepted students vs applications. DEI policies have encouraged universities to admit more female and minority students.
  • I will take notice when the the top 50% of graduates are split 50/50 female/male.
  • This is just clueless DEI manipulation to achieve equality of outcome not equality of opportunity.
    If this is how i'ts going to be then I'm looking forward to the inevitable DEI initiatives to force women to reach equality in all the dirty jobs, such as road maintainers, sewage workers and frontline soldiers.
    Yeah thought not. ....and to the same system standing up for men to reach equality in fields such as teaching and nursing. ...Yeah thought not too.

There is very little future in being right when your boss is wrong.

Working...