Exploring Gender Diversity in IT and CS Departments Within 3 Private Universities in Erbil City

The number of information technology (IT) jobs is increasing dramatically in Iraq. This has produced an increased need for IT graduates than before. On the other hand, most IT and computer science (CS) departments in private universities are seeing small numbers of females in their courses. This ind...

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Main Authors: Mohammad Salim Abulrahman MSc, Savriddin Khalilov MSc
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-10-01
Series:Gender and the Genome
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2470289719882438
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spelling doaj-fddf54c093c6402daa809667eda9ccc02020-11-25T02:54:21ZengSAGE PublishingGender and the Genome2470-29002019-10-01310.1177/2470289719882438Exploring Gender Diversity in IT and CS Departments Within 3 Private Universities in Erbil CityMohammad Salim Abulrahman MSc0Savriddin Khalilov MSc1 IT Department, College of Science, Tishk International University, Erbil, Iraq IT Department, College of Science, Tishk International University, Erbil, IraqThe number of information technology (IT) jobs is increasing dramatically in Iraq. This has produced an increased need for IT graduates than before. On the other hand, most IT and computer science (CS) departments in private universities are seeing small numbers of females in their courses. This indicates that these private universities have failed in attracting a sufficient percentage of female students. In this article, we explore the gender gap in IT and CS departments at 3 private universities: Tishk, Cihan, and Bayan, using 3 data sets related to the 2017 to 2018 academic year. The research design is descriptive and primary data were collected using personal observations made by the authors over the past 2 years. By analyzing these data sets, we can discover important issues such as students’ diversity in computing departments. For example, we find that a gender gap does not clearly exist in the IT department of Tishk University, while it’s more obvious in CS departments of Bayan and Cihan Universities. This finding implies that there is a need for some initiatives to attract women to IT and CS departments and to more investigate the gender gap in computing within the higher education level. These findings may also be relevant to the computing programs at other large public universities.https://doi.org/10.1177/2470289719882438
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammad Salim Abulrahman MSc
Savriddin Khalilov MSc
spellingShingle Mohammad Salim Abulrahman MSc
Savriddin Khalilov MSc
Exploring Gender Diversity in IT and CS Departments Within 3 Private Universities in Erbil City
Gender and the Genome
author_facet Mohammad Salim Abulrahman MSc
Savriddin Khalilov MSc
author_sort Mohammad Salim Abulrahman MSc
title Exploring Gender Diversity in IT and CS Departments Within 3 Private Universities in Erbil City
title_short Exploring Gender Diversity in IT and CS Departments Within 3 Private Universities in Erbil City
title_full Exploring Gender Diversity in IT and CS Departments Within 3 Private Universities in Erbil City
title_fullStr Exploring Gender Diversity in IT and CS Departments Within 3 Private Universities in Erbil City
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Gender Diversity in IT and CS Departments Within 3 Private Universities in Erbil City
title_sort exploring gender diversity in it and cs departments within 3 private universities in erbil city
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Gender and the Genome
issn 2470-2900
publishDate 2019-10-01
description The number of information technology (IT) jobs is increasing dramatically in Iraq. This has produced an increased need for IT graduates than before. On the other hand, most IT and computer science (CS) departments in private universities are seeing small numbers of females in their courses. This indicates that these private universities have failed in attracting a sufficient percentage of female students. In this article, we explore the gender gap in IT and CS departments at 3 private universities: Tishk, Cihan, and Bayan, using 3 data sets related to the 2017 to 2018 academic year. The research design is descriptive and primary data were collected using personal observations made by the authors over the past 2 years. By analyzing these data sets, we can discover important issues such as students’ diversity in computing departments. For example, we find that a gender gap does not clearly exist in the IT department of Tishk University, while it’s more obvious in CS departments of Bayan and Cihan Universities. This finding implies that there is a need for some initiatives to attract women to IT and CS departments and to more investigate the gender gap in computing within the higher education level. These findings may also be relevant to the computing programs at other large public universities.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2470289719882438
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