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Statistics on Diversity in Computer Science

Steve Williams · Thursday, July 1st 2010 at 2:51PM · 750 views


Computer science remains one of the most segregated fields in academia. The annual Taulbee survey shows that though females used to make up 37% of computer science majors in the earlier 1970s, this number has dropped significantly. According to the NSF, in 2005, women accounted for only about 15% of undergraduates receiving bachelors degrees in computer science. There is also a dramatic underrepresentation of Latinos and African Americans studying computer science, with only 4% and 3% of computer science bachelors degrees being awarded to students from these ethnic groups.

Yet, an examination of who is studying computer science in high school illustrates that this disparities in participation begins before college. Comparing the representation of females and students of color in California schools and United States schools with their representation in the AP Computer Science A and AB exams shows that AP Computer Science remains a highly segregated field, both by gender and by race.

Since the creation of the Computer Science Equity Alliance, computing participation has increased in LAUSD dramatically in APCS. These results are quite encouraging, especially since more students are studying computer science in LAUSD while state and national trends show decreasing enrollment at the high school and college levels.

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Steve Williams Coatesville, PA

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Comments (5)

Steve Williams Thursday, July 1st 2010 at 2:52PM

Sorry, the link:

http://www.apcsla.org/statistics.html

robert powell Friday, July 2nd 2010 at 8:54AM

interesting,

computer science is numbers and strange symbols---

African Americans and Latinos should be good with signs and things; but it also takes discipline and attentiveness, and that might be the hinderance?

Steve Williams Friday, July 2nd 2010 at 10:14AM

Here in Chester county, PA, there are only three secondary schools that teach CS and they are all vo-tech, and all located in suburbia. So maybe they just need to join us here in the burbs.

Steve Williams Friday, July 2nd 2010 at 10:24AM

Honestly Robert, the public schools are such a disappointment that I am thinking I should just start my own school. One inviolable rule though, pants will need to be worn at the waistline, not somewhere around the knees.

robert powell Saturday, July 3rd 2010 at 12:00PM

At 3 day conference for youth now.

will get back to you.

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