Campaign for more female engineers launches in the U.K.
Steve Chiotakis: The U.K. has the lowest proportion of female engineers in Europe. The engineering industry there is worried the imbalance is
affecting their competitiveness. So industry bosses are teaming up with schools across the U.K. today to launch a campaign encouraging more young women to go into engineering.
From London, here’s the BBC’s Kate McGough.
Kate McGough: The campaign is called “Talent 2030” and it wants little girls in the U.K. to dream a little less about a career in the spotlight, and a little more about a career building spotlights. Or bridges. Or spaceships.
Jane Wernick is a structural engineer who worked on London’s iconic observational wheel the London Eye. She’s a supporter of the campaign and says half the problem is that girls have too narrow an idea of what an engineer actually does.
Jane Wernick: They think that the person who mends your washing machine is an engineer or they think about hard hats and grease and mud, and they don’t realize that actually it touches every aspect of our physical world.
The campaign will be working with schools to encourage girls to choose subjects like physics and math. And to get young girls to think of a job in engineering as creative and collaborative.
2030 is the year when girls born today will be heading to college, so “Talent 2030” is hoping by then there will be a thriving engineering sector for today’s baby girls to step into.
In London, I’m the BBC’s Kate McGough for Marketplace.
There’s a lot happening in the world. Through it all, Marketplace is here for you.
You rely on Marketplace to break down the world’s events and tell you how it affects you in a fact-based, approachable way. We rely on your financial support to keep making that possible.
Your donation today powers the independent journalism that you rely on. For just $5/month, you can help sustain Marketplace so we can keep reporting on the things that matter to you.