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Computing Research News

August 2013     Vol.25 / No.7

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Center for Evaluating the Research Pipeline Infographic August 2013

By CRA CERP Staff

CERP-Infographic

First year graduate students enrolled in a PhD program in computing (N = 129) were asked How important was each of the following factors in your decision to pursue your current graduate degree in computing? Salary potential; Dependable employment; Career opportunities/advancement outside of academia. Responses ranged from (1) Not at all to (5) Extremely. These three items were aggregated to make a dependable employment index (Cronbach’s alpha = .81). Among women, U.S. citizens indicated that dependable employment was less important in their decision to pursue a PhD in computing than non-citizens, p ≤ .05; men showed no such difference. This finding highlights the importance of taking cultural beliefs and ideals into consideration when exploring reasons for gender disparities in computing fields.

Note: U.S. citizens = Native born + Naturalized + Permanent resident. Non-citizens = non-U.S. citizen with a temporary visa. Women U.S. citizens, n =31. Men U.S. citizens, n = 31. Women non-citizens, n = 15. Men non-citizens, n = 52. 

This analysis brought to you by the CRA’s Center for Evaluating the Research Pipeline (CERP). Want CERP to do comparative evaluation for your program or intervention? Contact cerp@cra.org to learn more. Be sure to also visit our website at http://cra.org/cerp/.

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