From Nowhere to Nobels : Pathways to Success for Women in STEM
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
11:45 am – 2:00 pm
Women now hold more than half of all American jobs, but they still make up less than twenty-five percent of the science, technology, engineering, and math or STEM workforce. And the numbers are even worse when it comes to the male-dominated field of computer science. Only last year a Yale study revealed that scientists at six major research institutions were more likely to favorably view a male job candidate than a woman with the same qualifications. Yet women are graduating in increasing numbers with STEM degrees, so why does this gender gap persist? And what can we learn from the trail-blazing women and institutions who have succeeded in reversing this trend?
New America's Breadwinning and Caregiving program and Future Tense hosted an event to explore pathways to success for women in STEM.
Agenda
11:45 a.m. Reception
12:00 p.m. A Campus Success Story
Maria Klawe President, Harvey Mudd College
12:15 p.m. Lessons from the Lab
Carol Greider
Winner of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Daniel Nathans Professor and Director, Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Nancy Hopkins
Amgen, Inc. Professor of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Moderator:
Liza Mundy
Director, Breadwinning and Caregiving Program, New America Foundation
12:45 p.m. A New Formula for Workplace Equality
Maria Klawe
President, Harvey Mudd College
Edmund Bertschinger
Institute Community and Equity Officer, Professor of Physics, Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Hannah Valantine
Senior Associate Dean, Stanford University
Moderator:
Meredith Wadman
Future Tense Fellow, New America Foundation
1:30 p.m. Incubating the Next Generation
Ashley Gavin
Curriculum Director, Girls Who Code
Kimberly Scott
Associate Professor, School of Social Transformation, Arizona State University
Executive Director, COMPUGIRLS
Moderator:
Geoff Brumfiel
Science Correspondent, NPR