Recruitment and Retention of Women Graduate Students in Computer Science and Engineering: Results of a Workshop Organized by the Computing Research Association San Francisco, June 21-22, 2000 Janice Cuny University of Oregon William Aspray Computing Research Association Reprinted by permission. Janice Cuny and William Aspray, Recruitment and Retention of Women Graduate Students in Computer Science and Engineering. Report of a Workshop, June 20-21, 2000. Organized by the Computing Research Association's Committee on the status of Women in Computing Research. Washington, DC: Computing Research Association, 2001. l f we want a different outcome, we're going to have to do things differently. We're making too little progress doing more o f the same thing. - John White, Dean of Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology [42] his document is the report of a workshop that convened a group of experts to discuss the recruitment and retention of women in Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) Graduate Programs. (1) Participants included long-time members of the CSE academic and research communities, social scientists engaged in relevant research, and directors of successful retention efforts. (2) The report is a compendium of the experience and expertise of workshop participants, rather than the result o f a
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