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How women can pick up the skills shortage slack

How women can pick up the skills shortage slack

By:  Briony Smith  On: 26 Feb 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Executives from Microsoft, IBM, CIPS and York University discuss strategies to attract more female recruits, family-friendly work environments and the challenges for internationally educated professionals

The skills shortage rages on, but there exists an untapped resource in Canada. Earlier this month, the women of the country’s tech sector gathered at the Information and Communications Technology Council’s “Women in ICT National Forum” in Toronto to discuss the lack of women in IT’s ranks and ways to lure them in—and keep them in.

Schools and teachers aren’t exactly inflaming the desire of young girls to try their hand at an IT career, according to the Forum attendees. Many women don’t bother taking math- and science-related classes during junior high school, high school, and university, so if they take a shine to tech later on, they often are deemed ineligible for positions. Stephanie McKendrick, executive director of the Toronto-based Canadian Women in Communications, said, “(Employers) should try not to punish women for choices made in grades eight or nine.”

This rings especially true as IT employers struggle to fill positions. Said talent manager Nadine Nichols of IBM Canada, presenting on behalf of her break-out session group: “The networking, communications, critical thinking, and business skills that women have from other disciplines such as business or management or even philosophy (apply in IT as well), so recruiters shouldn’t just look for computer science graduates.”

Microsoft Canada’s Ruth Morton, another group presenter and an IT pro advisor, said, “You should be able to move into IT from any field. Recruiters look for very specific keywords on resumes, but they need to expand what they will look for when hiring.”

Many presenters and attendees commented on how women might be more attracted to IT by tech jobs that better the world in some way. Examples of this include, said Carson, catching child predators online, disease control software, and battling identity theft. Another way into the field could be through growing interest greening up the corporate world, according to Nichols.

Another break-out session centred on retention of women in the IT work force via a brainstorm on the perfect women-friendly IT company. Dean of science and engineering Nick Cercone of Toronto’s York University spoke for his group and set the tone of the session by calling for a “family-friendly and flexible environment.”

The Toronto-based CIPS public relations manager Mylene Sayo, who was her group’s presenter, agreed that the option to telecommute was important. She said, “We need an innovative corporate culture where you’d be able to define your own role. There would also be a more open hierarchy that would allow you to talk to anyone in the company, and you’d be able to return to your job (after a pregnancy),” she said.


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Briony Smith Briony Smith is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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