Description

Offering a dramatic counterpoint to the findings that from elementary school through to college, women's interest in science steadily declines, and that "real science" only occurs in research and laboratory investigation, this text describes women engaged with science or engineering at the margins. In an innovative high school genetics class, a school-to-work internship for prospective engineers, an environmental action group and a nonprofit conservation agency, the authors found a high proportion of women who were successful at learning and using technical knowledge, and advancing in equal percentages to men. This text explores how women still had to pay a price, working outside traditional laboratories, receiving less financial compensation and little public prestige, unless they acted like male professionals.

Women's Science: Learning and Succeeding from the Margins

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Paperback / softback by Margaret A. Eisenhart , Elizabeth Finkel

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Offering a dramatic counterpoint to the findings that from elementary school through to college, women's interest in science steadily declines,... Read more

    Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
    Publication Date: 15/11/1998
    ISBN13: 9780226195452, 978-0226195452
    ISBN10: 0226195457

    Number of Pages: 290

    Non Fiction , Mathematics & Science , Education

    Description

    Offering a dramatic counterpoint to the findings that from elementary school through to college, women's interest in science steadily declines, and that "real science" only occurs in research and laboratory investigation, this text describes women engaged with science or engineering at the margins. In an innovative high school genetics class, a school-to-work internship for prospective engineers, an environmental action group and a nonprofit conservation agency, the authors found a high proportion of women who were successful at learning and using technical knowledge, and advancing in equal percentages to men. This text explores how women still had to pay a price, working outside traditional laboratories, receiving less financial compensation and little public prestige, unless they acted like male professionals.

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