The Gender Gap in Engineering Programs in Colombia

In Colombia, engineering is an unattractive field for women. As of 2018, 63,7% of undergraduate engineering graduates were men, and only 36,3% were women. This gap has not changed significantly between 2001 and 2018. This paper analyzes the gap between women and men who obtain undergraduate or gradu...

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Main Authors: Nancy Elena Hamid Betancur, Maria C. Torres-Madronero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Nacional de Colombia 2021-04-01
Series:Ingeniería e Investigación
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/ingeinv/article/view/86758
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spelling doaj-44282b01de5f449ea869d4f39930e3372021-05-04T21:10:19ZengUniversidad Nacional de ColombiaIngeniería e Investigación0120-56092248-87232021-04-01412e86758e8675810.15446/ing.investig.v41n2.8675869477The Gender Gap in Engineering Programs in ColombiaNancy Elena Hamid Betancur0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0311-1414Maria C. Torres-Madronero1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9795-2459Instituto Tecnologico MetropolitanoInstituto Tecnologico MetropolitanoIn Colombia, engineering is an unattractive field for women. As of 2018, 63,7% of undergraduate engineering graduates were men, and only 36,3% were women. This gap has not changed significantly between 2001 and 2018. This paper analyzes the gap between women and men who obtain undergraduate or graduate engineering degrees in Colombia. The analysis is based on data from the Labor Observatory for Education (OLE) and the National Information System for Higher Education (SNIES) between 2001 to 2018, and it is presented according to degree levels (undergraduate, master and Ph.D.), regions, specific fields of engineering, and salary. The data show a clear difference between the number of women and men graduating from engineering programs at all levels. This gap disappears in programs related to environmental, biomedical, and chemical engineering, where more than 50% of the graduates are women; but, in programs such as electrical, electronic, and mechanical engineering, the gap is more critical, with less than 20% of women’s representation. To propose public policies or national programs to improve this situation, this paper also presents a review of international initiatives that have succeeded in improving the representation of women in engineering programs.https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/ingeinv/article/view/86758gender gapengineering undergraduate programgraduate program
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nancy Elena Hamid Betancur
Maria C. Torres-Madronero
spellingShingle Nancy Elena Hamid Betancur
Maria C. Torres-Madronero
The Gender Gap in Engineering Programs in Colombia
Ingeniería e Investigación
gender gap
engineering
undergraduate program
graduate program
author_facet Nancy Elena Hamid Betancur
Maria C. Torres-Madronero
author_sort Nancy Elena Hamid Betancur
title The Gender Gap in Engineering Programs in Colombia
title_short The Gender Gap in Engineering Programs in Colombia
title_full The Gender Gap in Engineering Programs in Colombia
title_fullStr The Gender Gap in Engineering Programs in Colombia
title_full_unstemmed The Gender Gap in Engineering Programs in Colombia
title_sort gender gap in engineering programs in colombia
publisher Universidad Nacional de Colombia
series Ingeniería e Investigación
issn 0120-5609
2248-8723
publishDate 2021-04-01
description In Colombia, engineering is an unattractive field for women. As of 2018, 63,7% of undergraduate engineering graduates were men, and only 36,3% were women. This gap has not changed significantly between 2001 and 2018. This paper analyzes the gap between women and men who obtain undergraduate or graduate engineering degrees in Colombia. The analysis is based on data from the Labor Observatory for Education (OLE) and the National Information System for Higher Education (SNIES) between 2001 to 2018, and it is presented according to degree levels (undergraduate, master and Ph.D.), regions, specific fields of engineering, and salary. The data show a clear difference between the number of women and men graduating from engineering programs at all levels. This gap disappears in programs related to environmental, biomedical, and chemical engineering, where more than 50% of the graduates are women; but, in programs such as electrical, electronic, and mechanical engineering, the gap is more critical, with less than 20% of women’s representation. To propose public policies or national programs to improve this situation, this paper also presents a review of international initiatives that have succeeded in improving the representation of women in engineering programs.
topic gender gap
engineering
undergraduate program
graduate program
url https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/ingeinv/article/view/86758
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