DIGITAL LIBRARY
ADDRESSING THE “LEAKY PIPELINE”: A REVIEW AND CATEGORISATION OF ACTIONS TO RECRUIT AND RETAIN WOMEN IN COMPUTING EDUCATION
1 Technological University Dublin (IRELAND)
2 University of Malta (MALTA)
About this paper:
Appears in: EDULEARN22 Proceedings
Publication year: 2022
Pages: 9405-9416
ISBN: 978-84-09-42484-9
ISSN: 2340-1117
doi: 10.21125/edulearn.2022.2274
Conference name: 14th International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies
Dates: 4-6 July, 2022
Location: Palma, Spain
Abstract:
Gender imbalance in computing education is a well-known issue around the world. For example, in the UK and Ireland, less than 20% of the student population in computer science, ICT and related disciplines are women. Similar figures are seen in the labour force in the field across the EU. The term “leaky" pipeline is often used to describe the loss of women before they progress to senior roles. Numerous initiatives have targeted the problem of the leaky pipeline in recent decades.

This paper provides a comprehensive review of initiatives related to techniques used to boost recruitment and improve retention among women in undergraduate computer science and computing courses in higher educational institutions. The review covers 350 publications from both academic sources and grey literature sources including governmental guidance, white papers and non-academic reports. It also includes sources in languages other than English.

The primary aim was to identify interventions or initiatives (which we have called “actions”) that have shown some effectiveness. A secondary objective was to structure our findings as a categorisation, in order to enable future action discussion, comparison and planning.

A particular challenge faced in a significant portion of the work reviewed was the lack of evaluation: i.e. the assessment of the direct relationship between the initiatives undertaken and the outcomes on retention or recruitment. There are only a limited number of studies that include a control group and these tend to focus on one particular intervention or action. In addition often the work presents a number of actions that were implemented and it is difficult to determine which action produced most impact. Considering these challenges, actions were identified that had some level of evaluation with positive impact, including where the evaluation was by measuring feedback.

The actions were categorised into four groups: Policy, Pedagogy, Influence & Support and Promotion & Engagement. Policy actions require support and potentially structural change and resources at organisation level. This can be at a department or school level within a higher level institution, and not necessarily just at the higher institution level. Pedagogy related actions are initiatives that are related to the teaching of computer science and technology in terms of curriculum, module delivery and assessment practice. The Influence and Support category includes actions associated with ways to influence women to choose computing at third level and once enrolled to support and encourage them to stay in the field. Finally Promotion and Engagement actions are initiatives to promote computer science and technology based courses and involve engagement and outreach with external stakeholders such as industry, communities and schools.

We present our categorisation, identifying the literature related to actions under each category and sub-category. We discuss the challenges with evaluating the direct impact of actions and outline how this work leads towards the next phase of our work – a toolkit of actions to promote retention and recruitment of women in computing based undergraduate courses.

This work will be of interest to third level institutions with STEM faculties, gender-balance policy makers, technical industry players, or any stakeholder in the field of STEM who wishes to understand and implement solutions to the imbalance of women in computing education and beyond.
Keywords:
Gender Balance, Computing Education.