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I'm a stranger here myself: a consideration of women in computing
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Source User Services Conference archive
Proceedings of the 20th annual ACM SIGUCCS conference on User services table of contents
Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Pages: 71 - 76  
Year of Publication: 1992
ISBN:0-89791-545-3
Author
Sponsor
SIGUCCS: ACM Special Interest Group on University and College Computing Services
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 4,   Downloads (12 Months): 18,   Citation Count: 8
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REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
Bernstein, Danielle R. 1992. Anew introduction to computer science. In In Search of Gender Free Paradigms for Computer Science Education, edited by C. Dianne Martin and Eric Murchie-Beyma. Eugene OR: International Society for Technology in Education.
 
2
Burton, M. D. 1987. Gender differences in professional socialization: A study of women and men becoming computer scientists. Tech Report, Carnegie-Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, June 1987. Committee on Social Science Research in Computing, Social and Decision Sciences Department.
 
3
Chronicle, 1992. The Chronicle of Higher Education Almanac, Vol. XXXIX, No. 1, August 26, 1992.
 
4
Clarke, Valerie. 1992. Strategies for involving girls in computer science, in in Search of Gender Free Paradigms for Computer Science Education, edited by C. Dianne Martin and Eric Murchie-Beyma. Eugene OR: International Society for Technology in Education.
 
5
CMU Computer Science Graduate Students and Staff, 1989. Dealing with pornography in Academia: Report on a Grassroots action. July 3, 1989.
 
6
Donato, Katharine and Roos, Patricia. 1987. Gender and earnings inequality among computer specialists. In Women, Work, and Technology, edited by Barbara Drygulski Wright, et al. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press.
7
 
8
Gilbert, Lucia; Gallessich, June; and Evans, Sherri. 1983. Sex of faculty role model and studentsU selfperceptions of competency. Sex Roles 9(5): 597-607.
 
9
Hornig, Lilli S. 1984. Women in Science and Engineering: Why so few? Technology Review, November/December, 1984: 30-41.
 
10
Huff, Charles and Cooper, Joel. 1987. Sex bias in educational software: The effect of designers' stereotypes on the software they design. Journal of Applied Social Psychology 17 (6); 519-532.
 
11
Huff, Charles W.; Fleming, John H.; and Cooper, Joel. 1992. Gender differences in human-computer interaction. In In Search of Gender Free Paradigms for Computer Science Education, edited by C. Dianne Martin and Eric Murchie-Beyma. Eugene OR: International Society for Technology in Education.
 
12
Kiesler, Sara; Sproull, Lee; and Eccles, Jacquelynne. 1985. Pool halls, chips, and war games: Women in the culture of computing. Psychology of Women Quarterly 9: 451-462.
 
13
Klein, Lesley. 1992. Female students' underachievement in computer science and mathematics: Reasons and recommendations. In In Search of Gender Free Paradigms for Computer Science Education, edited by C. Dianne Martin and Eric Murchie-Beyma. Eugene OR: International Society for Technology in Education.
 
14
Kramer, Pamela E. and Lehman, Sheila. 1990. Mismeasuring Women: A critique of research on computer ability and avoidance. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 16 (11): 158-172. Autumn, 1990.
 
15
MIT, 1983. Barriers to Equality in Academia: Women in Computer Science at MIT. Feb. 1983. The Laboratory for Computer Science and The Artificial Intelligence Laboratory,
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17
Sandler, Bernice R. 1986. The Campus Climate Revisited: Chilly for Women Faculty, Administrators, and Graduate Students. A publication of the Project on the Status and Education of Women, Association of American Colleges, 1818 R. St. NW, Washington, DC.
 
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