Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

Is 'macho culture' putting women off data science jobs?

Lead scientist Heather Peters uses a microscope to check cultures for signs of the H1N1 swine flu virus and other respiratory diseases at the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene in Baltimore, September 3, 2009. The new H1N1 virus has killed 36 U.S. children, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on women men female male girls boys teenagers teens development gender gap parity equality diversity progress change feminine masculine woman man sex biology roles dynamic balance bias androgynous environment renewable solar energy change transition friendly environment carbon footprint carbon emissions reduction change natural climate change global warming air pollution clean energy power renewables plastic plastics  Tech technology science chemistry biology physics electricity electric power battery charge positive negative lab laboratory scientist fourth industrial revolution volt voltage change progress advancement power new revolutionary robot robotics ai artificial intelligence machine learning

"Many workplaces have been designed by men for men." Image: REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Sonia Elks
Journalist, Reuters

Macho work cultures are driving away young women from data science jobs, said analysts on Thursday (20 Feb), warning a failure to diversify the male-dominated sector could result in biased technology that discriminates against women.

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Women hold less than a quarter of jobs in data science - where they use tech to analyse trends - and female students are put off by combative recruiting events like coding contests and hackathons, found consulting firm Boston Consulting Group.

"We need a woman's perspective to ensure what we build for our society represents our society," said Andrea Gallego, a partner at BCG GAMMA, the group's data arm, who added that the problem extended into other fields.

"If we start building models with biased teams, we are going to run into a number of longer term effects including ethics issues and models propagating a bias we're trying to stop."

The report comes amid concerns that the male-dominated tech sector is shoring up gender pay gaps and can result in tech which has in-built discrimination against women.

As technology transforms the world, data scientists have become among the most in-demand workers, according to reports by the career networking site LinkedIn published last month, which found it was the third fastest-growing job in the United States.

But the sector is failing to attract a wider pipeline of female talent in entry level jobs, found the report, based on surveys of more than 9,000 students and recent graduates with data-related degrees in about a dozen countries.

Young women were significantly more likely than men to see data science as uncomfortably competitive, said researchers.

They were also less likely to feel well-informed about career opportunities in data science, though countries with a higher proportion of women in tech did better at reaching women at the start of their careers.

The report called on companies to deal with the sector's "image problem" among women, including by building more inclusive and collaborative cultures.

Allyson Zimmerman of non-profit group Catalyst, which works to make workplaces more inclusive to women, said the data reflected a macho "bro-grammer" culture in many tech firms.

"Many workplaces have been designed by men for men," said Zimmerman, who heads the firm's operations in Europe, Africa and the Middle East, adding that firms should be concerned about a lack of female staffers.

"The number one way you can compete is through your talent. If you don't have diverse talent throughout the ranks you are missing out on innovation, better teams, better decisions and better outcomes," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

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