My, how times have changed: A woman, Hillary Clinton, is a serious contender to be the next U.S. president. But maybe they haven't changed all that much: According to the National Center for Women & Information Technology (NCWIT), there has been an astounding 70 percent decline in the number of incoming undergraduate women choosing to major in computer science between 2000 and 2005.
These numbers indicate a dramatic shift downward in women in high tech, but they don't tell us why. It could be that employment opportunities in high tech haven't gotten better for women since the 1980s, when females first started to break into the technology field. Or perhaps something deeper is going on: Perhaps women have decided that high tech is not a career path worth pursuing and are looking elsewhere.
[ Man or woman, find out what your job — or the one you want — should pay from the InfoWorld salary survey and salary calculator. ]
Despite major efforts by the National Science Foundation, IEEE, ACM, and others in the 1980s to encourage more women to enter the computer science and engineering professions, the latest numbers gathered by NCWIT show little progress. Although women hold 51 percent of professional positions in the United States, they hold only 26 percent in IT and just 13 percent of C-level positions in Fortune 500 technology companies. Statistics from the federal government show a similar pattern.
And there's not much hope for a new wave of women to step into these positions. Although girls took 56 percent of all Advanced Placement (AP) tests in high schools — the tests typically targeted by college-bound youths — only 15 percent of AP computer science test-takers were girls.
Research by Stanford University professor Shelley Correll indicates psychological pressure keeps many women from pursuing such careers, especially at the executive level. Her research indicates that women are often aware of the stereotypes about their gender, which causes them to judge their own abilities by unreasonably high standards, in order to prove the stereotypes untrue. That leads some women to pull back from leadership positions when their instincts clash with those stereotypes.
Five who've succeeded in the boys' club
Surveys tell you the pattern, but they don't provide the insight, much less the road map. So InfoWorld interviewed five women who have attained lofty positions in high tech to uncover what propelled them into the field and what has kept them successful in the IT boys' club over the years.
Tamara Casey, CEO of 4DK, is probably best known for her 14 years as vice president of technology strategy, architecture, and research at Nextel Communications. Today she is CEO and co-founder of 4DK, a company whose middleware appliance connects communications networks.





