ATTRACTING WOMEN TO ENGINEERING THAT SERVES DEVELOPING COMMUNITIES

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The University of Colorado at Boulder has created a program in Engineering for Developing Communities (EDC). It is currently formalized as a graduate program within the Environmental sub-discipline of Civil Engineering. Longer term plans are to create a certificate option for undergraduate students in the College of Engineering. In the meantime, a variety of courses have included EDC-related content and projects. Service-learning and active-learning opportunities to serve developing communities are available at the University of Colorado. To date, anecdotal evidence exists that the EDC program is particularly attractive to women. In the Engineers Without Borders (EWB) student chapter at the University of Colorado, the leadership board has been composed of 40-62% women over the years fall 2002 to spring 2005, compared to 25% and 15% on the American Society of Civil Engineering (ASCE-CU) and American Society of Mechanical Engineering (ASME-CU) boards in the 2004-2005 academic year, respectively. A nationwide survey of 35 to 45 different student chapters of these same organizations (EWB, ASCE, ASME) show more similar percentages of women on the leadership boards. At 22 universities where the ASCE student chapter has an “Outreach” or “Community Service” officer, 66% of these positions are filled by women. An on-going research project on a simple and low cost drinking water treatment device, the Filtrón, has attracted eight undergraduate researchers including 50% women and 50% minorities. In a college-wide undergraduate research internship program, the topics serving developing communities have attracted more women and minority student applicants than the average project topic. Although it appears that EDC is particularly attractive to women, larger sample sizes and broader evaluation of control populations are needed to confirm this hypothesis. Efforts are on-going to gather more definitive evidence. However, if a greater awareness of the opportunities to serve society were made known more women might enter engineering as a major in college and eventually as a profession.