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Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

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Page 1: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Professor Stan ScottHead of School

Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Page 2: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Source: Sex and Power 2013: Who Runs Britain?Source: Sex and Power 2014: Who Runs Britain?

University Vice Chancellors

14%

Page 3: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Bachelor students in Informatics ≈ 835,000

Source: Informatics Europe, Informatics Education in Europe: Institutions, Degrees, Students, Positions, Salaries. Key Data 2008-2013, October 2014

Page 4: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Master students in Informatics ≈ 148,000

Source: Informatics Europe, Informatics Education in Europe: Institutions, Degrees, Students, Positions, Salaries. Key Data 2008-2013, October 2014

Page 5: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Source: When Women Stopped Coding : Planet Money : NPRhttp://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2014/10/21/357629765/when-women-stopped-coding

Page 6: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities
Page 7: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

“If we can turn this situation around, it will open up new and rewarding career pathways for women as well as bringing huge benefits to STEM industries and to the UK economy. Our vision is that at least 30% of the UK STEM workforce will be female by 2020, but we cannot do it alone” Helen Wollaston, Director

As a creative occupation, a profession dependent on teamwork, and an industry responsible for producing the tools the rest of society uses, computing could benefit from incorporating more diverse perspectives.

Attracting more women to computing education and retaining them in the workforce would fulfil industry employment needs, strengthen our economy, and provide much needed diversity to our country’s cadre of technology innovators.

Employing a more diverse workforce brings a wider range of talents, skills and perspectives into an organisation

Why it matters

Source: WISE, ‘Engaging in gender equality, lessons learned from our work with higher education and research institutions’IEEE Computer Society, Computing Education ‘Attracting and Retaining Women in Computing’, Wendy DuBow, National Center for Women & Information Technology, October 2014

Page 8: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Why it matters

In a letter to all university Vice-Chancellors in January 2013, RCUK indicated that it expects those in receipt of Research Council funding to embed equality and diversity in all aspects of research practice as evidenced by participation in schemes such as

Athena SWAN, Project Juno, Investors in People, Stonewall Diversity Champions

and other similar initiatives to demonstrate departmental level action.

Page 9: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Women in academic roles

Progression of students into academia

Working environment for all staff

Extension to AHSSBL, April 2015

With the support of Equality Challenge Unit (ECU) and the UKRC, the Charter was officially launched on 22 June 2005, with the first awards conferred in 2006

128 Athena SWAN members

Bronze72+8

Silver6

Page 10: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

SchoolGold

2

SchoolSilver

9

InstitutionalSilver

The SSG’s two key roles are to assist with and monitor School SWAN activities and applications to implement the Institutional Action Plan.

Page 11: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Staff/Student numbers at 2013/14

≈ 80 Academics≈ 50+ Contract Research Staff≈ 100 PhD Students≈ 1700 UG/PGT Students

Page 12: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

SWAN Champions and role model

Head of School support and enthusiastic and committed self-assessment team (SAT)

Institutional support

Business improvement

Professor

Page 13: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Professor Máire O’Neill is Technical Director of Data Security Systems in the Centre for Secure Information Technologies and is Director for the new MSc in Cyber Security. She has two children under 5 and her husband is in full-time employment.

5-year Royal Academy of Engineering (RAEng) Research Fellowship

5-year EPSRC Leadership

British Female Inventor of the Year in 2007

RAEng Silver Medal in 2014

Máire has the distinction of being the youngest ever female professor at Queen’s, and its first female professor in the field of electrical and electronic engineering

Page 14: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Our SWAN Mission A culture that attracts female students and staff and one

that will help them thrive.

Removal of obstacles that are a barrier to females joining and staying.

To integrate gender equality and wider diversity into all aspects of our business, so that it becomes ordinary practice and offers the potential for sustainable change.

Key SWAN Themes Attract female students and staff to

EEECS

Provide career advice and support to female students and staff in EEECS

Make EEECS a good place to study and work for female students and staff

Self-assessment team (SAT)

Professors (1F, 2M) Lecturers (2 M) Senior Engineer (F) UG/PGR students (2F) Business Improvement (F) School Manager (M) Administrator (F) Marketing (1F, 1M)

Page 15: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities
Page 16: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

T&D image: http://aipsea.com/staff-training/ES image: http://mtmps.com

Page 17: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities
Page 18: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Leadership Excellence Programme designed around our flagship programmes – Business Leaders and Emerging Leaders with an additional module that focusses on Creativity, Innovation and Industry Collaboration

which we run in partnership with The European Business School in Frankfurt.

Page 19: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

T&D image: http://aipsea.com/staff-training/ES image: http://mtmps.com

Page 20: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

EEECS(could do better)

QUB STEMM (performing well)

Page 21: Professor Stan Scott Head of School Electronics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Athena SWAN Challenges and opportunities

Key SWAN Themes and new actions

Attract female students and staff to EEECS Rigorous review and replacement of all recruitment and advertising

material for unconscious bias Unconscious bias training for all staff Promote flexible working and part-time positions

Provide career advice and support to female students and staff in EEECS Line managers to discuss and document career plans with female post-

docs during appraisal and encourage them to participate in the Specialist Mentoring Scheme

Women’s Network in collaboration with the School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering with whom we share a building

Introduce Teaching Fellowships on an annual basis to give teaching experience to researchers to strengthen their CV

Mission Impossible?