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President and CEO, The Anita Borg Institute

President and CEO, The Anita Borg Institute

By:  Vawn Himmelsbach  On: 31 Jul 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Critics contend society is not encouraging girls to study IT. Of the few women who enter tech, nearly half leave. Why?

Last year NCWITT ran a study on the U.S. patenting database to see if it could connect diversity and innovation at a statistical level. It found that women’s patenting rates are far below men’s for U.S. technology patents — however, patents from teams comprised of both men and women are cited up to 42 per cent more than patents overall (citation rates are a strong indicator of how useful a patent is).

“If you want to encourage innovation within your own company, think about putting together mixed gender teams and encouraging more women to participate in the patenting process,” said NCWITT’s Slade.

People have been working on this problem for decades, but they’ve been doing it in isolated pockets and haven’t seen a lot of success — in part because they haven’t been able to leverage their efforts. “Our end goal is to put ourselves out of business,” she said, “where we don’t need to exist because it’s become so commonplace for women to choose technology.”










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Vawn Himmelsbach Vawn Himmelsbach is a Toronto-based journalist and regular contributor to IT World Canada's publications. She also writes about travel and runs the Web site http://GlobalNomad.ca.

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