Parents and teachers – it’s time to step up for STEM
Parents and teachers hold the key to giving girls the confidence and opportunity to drive the future of science and technology in Australia.
?Today, climate change, the global pandemic and artificial intelligence dominate news cycles, proving science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM) have a huge impact on our rapidly diversifying national economy.
?And while there is a need for more workers in STEM fields – research says 75 per cent of the fastest growing occupations will need people who have STEM-based skills and literacy – the Australian industry has a female problem. ?
Data shows that when you have more diversity in all areas of life, and specifically gender diversity, you get better outcomes in policy decisions and quality of life.
But in Australia girls enter STEM fields at dramatically lower rates than boys – resulting in less diverse thinking in global problem-solving, and less opportunities for girls to enter potentially high-satisfaction and prosperous careers.
The 2021 edition of the Australian Government’s STEM Equity Monitor shows women’s participation in STEM is slowly increasing – Women made up 36 per cent of Australian university STEM enrolments in 2019, up from 34 per cent in 2015. They comprise 28 per cent of workers in STEM, up from 24 per cent in 2016.
The broad benefits of a STEM education
As a scientist myself, I know first-hand the enormous benefits of understanding the key concepts and developments in science. A STEM education not only benefits your career, but also enriches your intellectual life.
Even if you don’t end up as a scientist – working in a lab, or on a boat, or on top of a mountain looking through a giant telescope – the skills you learn in science and engineering can be applied across all industries.
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Patience, determination, a logical and inquiring mind, an ability to connect seemingly abstract ideas, accuracy and analytical skills will take you wherever you want to go in life.
Following on from International Women’s Day, we need to ask ourselves what is stopping young women and girls from entering STEM professions. To do this we must focus on what is happening in the loungerooms and classrooms of Australia.
Teachers and parents have an important role to play
Teachers and parents must play a significant role in influencing or dispelling stereotypes in STEM education by changing the perception of what a scientist looks like. They can tell stories or use images featuring female mathematicians or scientists to highlight the work of these women and make them more visible.?
If a child asked to imagine a scientist only pictures a man in a lab coat, where does that leave all the little girls with dreams of going into STEM?
Secondly, universities, schools and parents need to work in partnership with government, industry, teachers, schools and students to enhance and enrich science and engineering opportunities to support girls to move into real-world STEM careers. We must recruit more women to the STEM disciplines at university and improve the rates at which we promote women and keep them working in STEM to eliminate the unacceptable gender gap. These imperatives apply equally to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island people, those living with disabilities, people born overseas and people from a whole host of other under-represented demographics.
School programs and mentoring will help
Programs which aim to address the under-representation of women in STEM, such as those offered at primary and high schools, can help. Pairing mentors with students and encouraging them to work in the field, such as the Mabel Park State High School girls in STEM partnership with QUT, matches students with mentors and supports them to develop the skills they need to pursue STEM studies.
Thirdly, we need sufficient teachers who are qualified to teach STEM subjects in the early years to encourage participation and work on projects that will broaden and deepen students’ interest. Students need to be inspired while they are still at school, at a time in their academic development where they might be interested in maths and science and they are making decisions about their future. Teachers can foster a growth mindset in students by emphasising that it’s practice rather than innate ability that improves performance.?
If we work together on tackling the lack of females who have STEM careers, we can foster change with a much broader conversation about automatically and universally including women and marginalised people.
Associate Professor of Organizational Learning and Capability Building
2 年Thank you Margaret Sheil AO for sharing this. Girls into STEM education is a good start to create the pipeline, having great role models like yourself is another. But a lot more needs to be done to ensure female scientists stay in these industries and are supported to leadership positions. Let's see humanity skills being taught in STEM and valued in our conversations.
Adviser, author, journalist and company director
2 年There is rightly a push for more STEM skills but it’s still presented at school (for all) as a binary choice - humanities or STEM. And the humanities offer a lot to the world too. As a humanities graduate and professional I’d love to see these two sides break out of their silos and offer some options at tertiary level to equip humanities students with STEM skills and vice Versa. The two don’t need to be mutually exclusive. Charles Dodgson was a great mathematician with an alter ego, Lewis Carroll, who was a great novelist.
Manager, Sales and Partnerships at Little Learners Love Literacy.
2 年I find this really interesting! Wanting to learn more I've taken a quick look at a few of the Melbourne private schools VCE results and could only find one school, Ivanhoe Girls' Grammar that has the Tertiary offers for 2021. About 45% have been offered a STEM place. It would be interesting to compare all girls with all boys schools and then co-ed schools. Perhaps most interesting would be the distribution at Haileybury who do parallel education from Year 5 onwards.
Multiple Global Roles in Metaverse Ecosystem -Business Value in #XR #Metaverse #Web3.0 #Blockchain3.0 #NFT #5G #VR #AR Intelligent Immersion #Cybersecurity #Sustainability #ESG #Cleantech #Inclusion
2 年Indeed Margaret Sheil AO getting girls interested in STEM is a challenge QUT (Queensland University of Technology)
Professor (ordinarius) of Ancient History
2 年Girls and Science, not exactly topping our federal government’s list of priorities.