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Breaking and entering the male domain. Women in the IT industry
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Source Special Interest Group on Computer Personnel Research Annual Conference archive
Proceedings of the 2001 ACM SIGCPR conference on Computer personnel research table of contents
San Diego, California, United States
Pages: 116 - 120  
Year of Publication: 2001
ISBN:1-58113-363-4
Authors
Liisa A. von Hellens  School of Computing and IT, Griffith University, Brisbane 4111 QLD Australia
Sue H. Nielsen  School of Computing and IT, Griffith University, Brisbane 4111 QLD Australia
Eileen M. Trauth  College of Business, Northeastern University, Boston, MA
Sponsor
SIGCPR: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Personnel Research
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 19,   Downloads (12 Months): 62,   Citation Count: 12
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ABSTRACT

Interviews with Australian IT professionals (twenty-two women and two men) working in technical areas are referenced to explore how the masculinity of the IT industry is perceived by women working as IT professionals. The skills the interviewees see as important for success in this industry and which have helped them to pursue a satisfactory and fulfilling career are also discussed. Mentoring is suggested as a means of changing young women's negative perceptions or IT as a career, in order to improve female participation in IT education and the IT industry.


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
AAUW (2000) American Association of University Women Educational Foundation, Tech-Savvy: Educating Girls in the New Computer Age. URL: http/www.aauw.org/2000/techsavvy.html. Date accessed: 27.10.2000.
 
2
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3
Bentsen, C. (2000a) "A Woman's Place," The C10 Magazine, Vol. 13., No. 22, 1 September 2000, p. 84. URL:http://www.cio.com/archive/090100_women_sidebar 1. html. Date accessed: 11.9.2000.
 
4
Bentsen, C. (2000b) "Why women hate IT," Cover Story Staffing, CIO Magazine, September 1, 2000, URL:http://www.cio.com/archive/090100_women.html. Date accessed: 11.9.2000.
 
5
Burke, F. (2000) "Women are coming on board but very slowly." The Australian, 5 September 2000: 18.
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8
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10
Greenhill, A., von Hellens L., Nielsen, Ss. & Pringle, R. (1997) "Australian Women in IT Education: Multiple Meanings and Multiculturalism", Proceedings of the 6th International IFIP conference on Women Work and Computerization (WWC-97), Bonn, Germany, 25-28 May 1997: 387-397.
 
11
Griffith, Victoria (2000) "It's a Man's New Economy," Financial Times, 25 August 2000: 8.
 
12
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13
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14
McCracken, D. (2000) "Winning the Talent War for Women", Harvard Business Review, November-December 2000:159-167.
 
15
Nielsen, S.H., von Hellens, L. A., Pringle, R. & Greenhill, A. (1999) "Students' perceptions of information technology careers. Conceptualizing the influence of cultural and gender factors for IT education." GATES (Greater Access to Technology Education and Science) Journal, (5) 1, 1999.
 
16
Nielsen, S., von Hellens, L. & Wong, S. (2000) "The Women in IT Project: Uncovering the Pride and Prejudices." Proceedings of the 6th Australasian Women in Computing Workshop, Brisbane, 20-22 July 2000. URL: http://www.sqi.gu.edu.au/wic2000.
 
17
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Trauth, E.M., Derksen, F.E.J.M. & Mevissen, H.M.J. (1998) "Societal Factors and the Diffusion of EDI," in K.V. Andersen (ed.) ED1 and Data Networking in the Public Sector: Government Action, Diffusion and Impacts, Ktuwer Academic Publishers, Boston.
 
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Trauth, E.M., Nielsen, S.H and yon Hellens, L.A. (2000) "Explaining the IT Gender Gap: Australian Stories." Proceedings of the 10 th Australasian Conference on Information Systems, Brisbane, Australia, December 2000.
 
23
von Hellens, L.A., Nielsen, S.H., Doyle, R., and Greenhill, A. (1999) "Bridging the 1T skills gap. A strategy to improve the recruitment and success of IT students." Proceedings of the 9 th Australasian Conference on Information Systems, Wellington, NZ, December 1999, 1129-1143.
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CITED BY  12

Collaborative Colleagues:
Liisa A. von Hellens: colleagues
Sue H. Nielsen: colleagues
Eileen M. Trauth: colleagues