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Article about the importance of keeping score on female scientist

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Dynamic Content (website,portal, blog, newsfeed, etc.)
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English
Date created: 
2015
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Article and talk about how gender shape the future of technology?

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Media Type: 
Dynamic Content (website,portal, blog, newsfeed, etc.)
Language(s): 
English
Date created: 
2015
Is this resource freely shareable?: 
Shareable
Total energy: 
116

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A curated collection of books about women in WWII during the Bletchley Park codebreaking operation.

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Media Type: 
Dynamic Content (website,portal, blog, newsfeed, etc.)
Language(s): 
English
Date created: 
2015
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Not applicable
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131

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Science is not above sexism. At least scientists and engineers are not. In June, Nobel Laureate Tim Hunt made sexist remarks about women being too distracting for laboratories. A social media backlash ensued. ‘#DistractinglySexy’ became a hot Twitter topic, with female engineers posting photos of themselves at work – in clean suits, hard hats or simply knee-deep in research.

In July, '#LookLikeAnEngineer' went viral after Isis Wenger, a software engineer in the US, was told she was 'too pretty' to be an engineer. A number of female scientists from Europe added their voices to both movements, highlighting the fact that women in science continue to face explicit and implicit biases every day. We spoke to organisations across Europe and researchers at TU Delft to get a picture of the situation.

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