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Jan 8, 2025 |
goskagit.com | Joseph R. Cimpian
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Jan 8, 2025 |
idahopress.com | Joseph R. Cimpian
Gender balance in computer science and engineering is improving at elite universities but getting worse elsewhere
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Jan 8, 2025 |
theconversation.com | Joseph R. Cimpian
The share of computer science and engineering degrees going to women has increased at the most selective American universities over the past 20 years and is approaching gender parity, while the proportion has declined at less selective schools. Those are the main findings of a study my colleague and I recently published in the journal Science. Jo R.
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Jan 8, 2025 |
tolerance.ca | Joseph R. Cimpian
© 2025 Tolerance.ca® Inc. All reproduction rights reserved. All information reproduced on the Web pages of www.tolerance.ca (including articles, images, photographs, and logos) is protected by intellectual property rights owned by Tolerance.ca® Inc. or, in certain cases, by its author. Any reproduction of the information for use other than personal use is prohibited.
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Jan 8, 2025 |
caledonianrecord.com | Joseph R. Cimpian
The share of computer science and engineering degrees going to women has increased at the most selective American universities over the past 20 years and is approaching gender parity, while the proportion has declined at less selective schools. Those are the main findings of a study my colleague and I recently published in the journal Science.
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Nov 21, 2024 |
science.org | Chenshu Liu |Feyza Yilmaz |Ayumi Kuratani |Joseph R. Cimpian
AbstractMen considerably outnumber women in physics, engineering, and computer science (PECS) majors, with a recent male-to-female ratio of ~4:1, a stark contrast to the near parity in other science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines (1). This gender disparity in PECS carries wide-reaching implications for equity, innovation, and scientific advancement.
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Aug 23, 2023 |
clinicaladvisor.com | Joseph R. Cimpian
The Conversation — Federal data on LGBQ student health contain a significant amount of potentially exaggerated or untruthful responses, raising questions about how they might skew people’s understanding of risky behavior among teens. These inaccuracies affect some responses more than others. That’s according to an analysis my colleagues and I did of high school surveys administered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
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Aug 18, 2023 |
medicalxpress.com | Joseph R. Cimpian
Federal data on LGBQ student health contain a significant amount of potentially exaggerated or untruthful responses, raising questions about how they might skew people's understanding of risky behavior among teens. These inaccuracies affect some responses more than others. That's according to an analysis my colleagues and I did of high school surveys administered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, better known as the CDC.
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Aug 17, 2023 |
caledonianrecord.com | Joseph R. Cimpian
By Joseph Cimpian, Professor of Economics and Education Policy, New York University Federal data on LGBQ student health contain a significant amount of potentially exaggerated or untruthful responses, raising questions about how they might skew people's understanding of risky behavior among teens. These inaccuracies affect some responses more than others.
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Aug 17, 2023 |
tolerance.ca | Joseph R. Cimpian
© 2023 Tolerance.ca® Inc. All reproduction rights reserved. All information reproduced on the Web pages of www.tolerance.ca (including articles, images, photographs, and logos) is protected by intellectual property rights owned by Tolerance.ca® Inc. or, in certain cases, by its author. Any reproduction of the information for use other than personal use is prohibited.