ACS: One quarter of IT workers are women

 

Society launches compendium of public sector data.

Almost one in four Australian IT workers are women, according to an Australian Computer Society (ACS) review of public sector data.

Launched on Thursday, the ACS ICT Statistical Compendium found there were around 545,000 total ICT workers in Australia.

About 23.5 percent (122,797) of technical, professional, management or trade staff were women.

Citing a Feb 2010 ABS-CIIER report, the ACS found that almost 60 percent of ICT trainers, and almost half of graphic and web designers were women.

Female ICT trade staff were less common; less than 10 percent of telecommunications and electronics trade workers were women.

The ACS identified 13,615 female software and application programmers, representing nearly 20 percent of those roles.

The findings were a surprise to software engineer Damana Madden, who co-founded Girl Geek Dinners in Sydney.

"I have worked in many places over more than a decade and have never been in a situation where the percentage of women was anywhere near that [23.5 percent]," said Madden.

"There aren't many women in technical roles. There are very few female software engineers. Women are under-represented in highly skilled technical roles."

Madden said women, as a minority group in the IT industry, were not often included in future planning without strong advocacy.

Additionally, women were sometimes viewed as a "token hire" in large organisations and felt especially pressured to prove their worth, she said.

"On a whole, women in IT are doing well in a difficult environment," she said. "We are positive and believe things are always improving, although not solved."

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ACS: One quarter of IT workers are women
"CyrusLesser: Anonymous comments should be treated with suspicion. Whereas any full member of the ACS should just be ignored completely."
By Sams
 
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Comments: 6
AusPom
Sep 24, 2010 7:48 AM
Sorry, but the ACS is so far out of touch with reality you cannot trust anything they have to say. How about the statistic of how many IT workers are actually members of the ACS. The figure is somewhere below 5%. Maybe 1 in 4 of their members are women but that is all.
CyrusLesser
Sep 24, 2010 7:56 AM
The stats were independently compiled so AusPom would have more credibility if his or her profile were completed. Anonymous comments should be treated with suspicion.
realitybites
Sep 24, 2010 9:26 AM
@Cyrus - I'm curious to know why you think a completed profile gives more credibility? If you apply credibility based on a completed profile, then you are automatically assuming honesty from the person when they completed the profile right?

Also, why should anonymous posts be treated with suspicion?
Surely a valid point/question, is valid whether it's anonymous or not?

[edit] Removed extra "should" from second question. I'm not a morning person :)

Edited by realitybites: 24/9/2010 09:35:59 AM
tallguy
Sep 24, 2010 7:23 PM
Nice statistics. So what?

How about some analysis. Is this good or bad? Do we want more women or is this enough (I would suggest more)? How do we compare to other OECD countries? What do current university enrolments suggest for future trends? What, if anything, is anyone doing with this information (apart from being surprised)?
HubertCumberdale
Sep 24, 2010 9:16 PM
This topic comes up all the time, I'm not sure why it even matters, why is there always this need to get a particular gender into a field that they may not be interested in, the whole "Women are under-represented" I dont buy that for a second... and it's funny how it's always the IT and business related jobs that they complain about, you dont hear "Women are under-represented in sanitation!" I wonder why.
Sams
Sep 25, 2010 12:09 AM
CyrusLesser: Anonymous comments should be treated with suspicion.

Whereas any full member of the ACS should just be ignored completely.
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