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Internet Outreach to Prospectives

Internet Outreach to Prospectives. Univ of Washington http://www.cs.washington.edu/WhyCSE Berkeley ME on YouTube Dean Dennis Lieu http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SfjqWMPjYcQ. Undergraduate Women in EECS. The Numbers External Input Opportunities and Resources February 9, 2009

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Internet Outreach to Prospectives

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  1. Internet Outreach to Prospectives Univ of Washington http://www.cs.washington.edu/WhyCSE Berkeley ME on YouTube Dean Dennis Lieu http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SfjqWMPjYcQ

  2. Undergraduate Women in EECS The Numbers External Input Opportunities and Resources February 9, 2009 Sheila Humphreys, Ph.D. EECS Director of Diversity

  3. NCWIT collects data on female participation in computing from several sources. Figure 1 above shows that in 2008, females who indicate an intention to major in computing increased by one percent (N>300,000 students). UC Berkeley’s female applicant pool is slightly smaller each year than the percentage of girls intending to major in CS based on SAT scores.

  4. Retention of EECS Women 2002-2004 Retention of women about the same as for men. Entry % Graduated Women All 2002 94% 89% 2003 81 % 82% Median GPA 2005-7 women 3.1 men 3.3

  5. Enrollment Comparisons • MIT EECS 28% Women • CMU CS 18% ECE 16% • UW CS 22% • Harvard CS 17% • Stanford CS 12% EE 18% • UCLA CS 10% CSE 9% UCB

  6. EECS Undergraduate Admissions 2008 EECS Applied Admit (rate) Enroll Total 2161 447 (21%) 228 (51%) Women 314 74 (24%) 33 (45%) Women=15% of freshman class. URM 315 26 (8%) 4 (15%) Source: College of Eng. 08

  7. EECS Adv. Board Challenges • Can EECS increase yield of admitted women from 45% to 80% (eg Cal Tech) • Can EECS match other COE depts- % of women enrolled?

  8. EECS Advisory Board Recommendations • “You will need to get out of your comfort zone to change the department; it will be awkward and requires (faculty) leadership.” • Community matters; leverage the low numbers through 1-1 relationships/faculty • Climate: student to student interaction very important: “paintball vs. evening of theater”

  9. NCWIT RecommendationsRecruitment • Track enrollment data with faculty • EECS is “passive” in HS recruitment • Go after Undeclared Students • Survey students as they enter major • Generate hypotheses about decline

  10. NCWIT: Lower div. Curriculum • Top recommendation: ‘Clone Dan Garcia’ • Promote lab-centric approach of CS 61B and 61C • Evaluate lab-centric courses: persistence in CS, gender, as well as student achievement • Reform & market Intro CS

  11. Opportunities for EECS • Create presence on YouTube to reach HS • Recruit newly admitted women even more vigorously March 30-May 1 • Engage faculty (even more) in contacting them • Leverage ugrad involvement in recruiting • Assign Big Sisters earlier, at admission

  12. Opportunities, cont. Increase research engagement • Gamescrafters model: lower div ok. • Intel Ugrad Research Program very effective for grad school admission 1/06-1-09 • 41 women participants out of 47- 2006-2009: 85% to graduate school • SUPERB CS REU: 50% women but

  13. Discussion • Joe Hellerstein: We should be leading, developing strategies that others will want to us not fixing up our own Cal Day. • Babak: We can be more active recruiting undeclared students. At MIT, decision is deferred. If we recruit them, we need to be flexible about point of entry to CS major • Jeff: We can recruit from among undeclared students in the College. • Dan: in early process of new CS0: “Intro to Computing” • Linking CS to other fields, as the bio + CS shown in UW video • Christos: we can link to UW web with attribution • Ruzena: We need to hire more women to be role models. • Brian: decline in our CS figures tracks national decline in interest. • Dave P.: Taking on the teaching of hs CS is too big a project: focus on students already on our campus. There are enough to focus on.

  14. Recruit not just L&S but COE undeclared students • Change the name of computing to: Engergy Health and Information Technology in the interest of Society • Fiona: Find ways to integrate relevant research themes into how we present ourselves to young women. • Vel: women used to be limited in professions: more math majors then, to be teachers and now….? • Paul H: factors that lower our yield are important: size of campus, classes, safety. • Utilize peer testimonials more in recruitment; increase student-to-student interaction • Take a strategic rather than tactical approachCast a wide net with broader intro courses

  15. EECS Women’s Community • BIG Sister Program for freshmen/transfers • AWE ugrad women meets weekly • AWE reports at annual Faculty Retreat • Mentoring by speakers,grads : WICSE/AWE lunch 1/month • IEEE: woman president &11/37 officers • Visitors: Fran Allen, Teresa Meng, Estrin, Landau, etc

  16. EECS Diversity Programs with external funds • CISCO Scholarships ($40-60k) • Intel Undergrad Research Program $50-60k • NSF REU SUPERB-Computer Science in the Interests of Society $70k/year • NSF Empowering Leadership Alliance Ruzena Bajcsy) $45k/year)

  17. Lessons from MIT • EECS is PROACTIVE at PreFrosh level; women are courted • SUMMER Program: 35-40 women students for one month; half are admitted • “Discover EECS” Freshman Pre-orientation Program a week early:  encourage women especially to attend--only 45  of whom half are women • Introductory course very effective • Course VI recruits students freshman year

  18. Distribution in EECS Options • Comnet 112 • Elec 142 CS 180 CS L& S= 112 • CSE 80 • General 378 • Double 9 • Minors 5

  19. Lessons from UW CS • Freshmen identify influential high school teachers: annual dinner with faculty and students invited to annual dinner with students: ‘Love-fest’ • Reliance on specific faculty(Lazowska) for Intro CS courses • Recruit strong students from intro CS courses • Make pre-CS majors part of the community early

  20. Lessons from CMU • Admissions done by CS not campus • Expanded criteria for admission (Blum) • Active student recruiters • Supportive culture

  21. BFOIT encourages girls and underrepresented minorities to consider IT majors and fields, by sponsoring middle and high school computer science and engineering camps- Science for Youth (SCI-FY) and the Summer Institute for Future Computer Scientists and Engineers. • BFOIT started working with 25 students for one week, in 1999. This is the 10th year and BFOIT/SCI-FY has served over 425 students, many for 4 years, and works with and average of 63 students per year, all year. • Our students work with Alice, Scratch, LEGO Mindstorms, LOGO/jLOGO, TurtleGraphics, and Java. • Over 9 years, BFOIT/SCI-FY has secured over $300,000 in small grants, from Sun Microsystems, Microsoft, HP, numerous private donations and especially the S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation. • BFOIT has also supported WiSE scholarships, Sun scholarships, Kaplan and Princeton Review SAT prep and private college coaching, and co-sponsored with COE a couple of “Recruitment Days.”

  22. Ethnic Minority Enrollment

  23. Ugrad Women Profile • Median Cumulative GPA 2005-07 Women 3.1 Men 3.3 Potential women grad students: # Seniors with GPA > 3.5 = 14/43 # Juniors with GPA > 3.5 = 6/17

  24. EECS Degrees/Gender

  25. Snapshots • No women nominees to CRA Outstanding Undergraduate Award in 08 • 1 woman applied to UCB EECS grad • 3 women applied to 5th year MS • 1/27 women in EECS Honors Program • 2/33 EE women doing 199 Research • ? CS women (data to come from CS)

  26. Diversity • CA Proposition 209 constraints (1996) • No preferences solely on basis of gender and ethnicity • Socioeconomic, unusual challenges, disability, rural, etc • Rules: http://www.ucop.edu/ogc/enhance_diversity.html

  27. Department/Campus Diversity EECS Graduate Affirmative Action Advisers: • Ruzena Bajcsy • Seth Sanders Campus: Vice-Chancellor Gibor Basri, Equity and Inclusion, $4.5 million

  28. Lessons from UCLA • CENS Center focuses on pre-college pipeline • Leadership: Deborah Estrin, PI • Targets LA Schools, summer research • CENS HS Scholars Program: pipeline  • CENS trips to LA high schools

  29. Enrollment Comparisons COE • Bioengineering 37% Women • Civil & Environmental 34% • Mechanical 13% • EECS 10%

  30. Ethnic Minority Enrollment

  31. National Imaging Campaign • NCWIT http://www.ncwit.org/resources.res.outreach.html • ACM http://computingcareers.acm.org/ • NAE Marketing Study: “Changing the Conversation” • Girl Scouts http://www.girlscouts.org/news/news_releases/2008/motorola_foundation.asp

  32. WICSE at SF State 11/08

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