首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Why Girls Need to Switch on to Computing The garden is coming along nicely. Flowers spring into bloom in the herbaceous borders;
Why Girls Need to Switch on to Computing The garden is coming along nicely. Flowers spring into bloom in the herbaceous borders;
admin
2011-01-14
94
问题
Why Girls Need to Switch on to Computing
The garden is coming along nicely. Flowers spring into bloom in the herbaceous borders; mature trees are imported to cast their shade across the lawn. If only real life was this simple. For Bernadette Carverry and Jessica Allen, both 10, designing a garden takes a matter of minutes, not years. Later they might switch to designing a room, complete with plasma TV, or a bedroom, with lava lamps and pot plants. "I like computers," says Jessica, "you can design lots of things." "I liked it when we got to design clothes, and do interviews," says Bernadette. "It was like something you see in a magazine." The girls are part of an after-school computer club specifically tailored to get girls interested in what can often be an all-too-macho world of computer games and web design. Once a week they come along from their west London primary school to the ICT suite of the Sacred Heart High School in Hammersmith, an ZZ to 16 maintained Catholic girls’ school, for an hour or so of girly fun at the keyboard. And it clearly is fun. Every computer station in the room is taken, either by the dozen visiting pupils, or by Sacred Heart students, and screens glow with bubble gum colours as girls run a rock concert, design a magazine or plan a fashion show. "The target is girls in years six and seven. It’s nice to be able to offer them something different," says head of ICT Niall Quinn. "They find it creative, and they are learning about ICT almost subliminally."
Behind the fun lie serious problems. Girls are perfectly happy to use computers as social aids, to chat with their friends or read e-mails, but they are not acquiring the heavyweight technological skills of using spreadsheets, constructing databases and designing web pages. Pre-school girls seem to embark on life just as interested as boys in computers, but somewhere along the way the rot sets in, so that only a mere fraction of the country’s computer graduates are female. Which means that an enormous number of skilled jobs are closed to girls when they leave school, and the e-skills industries, in turn, are finding it hard to get people of the right calibre.
This has serious implications for the country’s long-term technological capability. "Jobs are growing in the IT sector much faster than in the economy as a whole," says Brian McBride, former managing director of T-Mobile, "but there is an overall shortage of skills, and a basic gender imbalance in the industry. Only about twenty per cent of the workforce is female, and of the women who go into it, many leave to have their families and so on. Part of the problem is the IT and telecommunications image. People tend to think of geeky, long-haired boys playing war games!" Because of this, his former company and other corporate heavyweights, such as British Airways, IBM, the Ford Motor Company and Cisco, have thrown their muscle behind a new initiative to make computers more accessible and girl-friendly. The Department for Education and Skills came up with funding (£8.4m until 2007), companies donated time, advice and software, and the Computer Club for Girls, or CC4G as it is known, was launched in 2002, with a pilot programme funded by the South East England Development Agency. "We did some research among women’s groups and employers and we found that girls lost interest between about 9 and 13, and weren’t carrying on with IT in secondary school," says Melody Hermon, project manager with e-skills UK, the national skills council for the IT sector, which is running the programme.
So CC4G developed software for an after-school computer club—mainly in a startling shade of pink—which would allow girls to do all kinds of things dear to their hearts from designing digital dance moves to planning a sports event. On the way, so the thinking went, gills would become acquainted with programmes such as Photoshop, MS PowerPoint and MS Excel, and gain confidence in all aspects of using computers. The club would work for all kinds of schools, whether in rich or poor areas, and for all kinds of pupils, from the very bright to the academically challenged. Since the materials were tailored to the national curriculum it would also underpin the ICT curriculum that pupils were following in key stages two and three and help improve their performance. Most clubs would run after school, or in the lunch-hour, but, once enrolled, club members would also be free to access the website at home. So far 1,054 schools are registered, and some of them have 80 to 90 girls signed up to their clubs. "It’s picking up all the time," says Hermon. "We help and support schools to get started and encourage girls to return to the site out-of- hours. The whole thing has a non-school, club-type feel about it, with things that we give away, like pens and bags, which is what girls want. I have two daughters, so I know)"
The club is free to schools, and teachers get induction sessions, plus online and telephone support, and those who have been running pilot clubs report good results, with a positive impact on girls ICT achievements. Two thirds of girls in these clubs now say they are more likely to think about a career in ICT than before. "The club has made a profound difference in school to attitudes and aptitudes of girls in the ICT area," says Deborah Forster, head of Trinity School, Newbury, a specialist performing arts and technology college. "What it has helped do is reinforce the critical link between ICT, the arts, creativity and the full range of subjects. That’s the point: IT is an essential part of any career nowadays." "The beauty of the club is the way it combines a fun, real-life structure for learning IT-related skills with the development of a whole set of wider transferable skills, from project management to teamwork and evaluation. The girls absolutely love going to the club and have been its biggest advocate within school by spreading the word," says Jenny Wilkins, head of Skinners’ Company’s School for Girls, in east London.
*
选项
答案
(wider) transferable skills
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/xdVO777K
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
ThenumberofconnectionsCthatcanbemadethroughaswitchboardtowhichTtelephonesareconnectedisgivenbytheformulaC
TriangulargardenABCisredesignedbyincreasingthelengthofACby20percenttopointCanddecreasingthelengthofABby2
Acircularflowerbedisinscribedinaflat,squaregardenplotthatmeasuresxmetersoneachside.ColumnA
Mandyhasagardenthatisshapedlikearighttriangle,asshownbelow.Todeterminehowmuchfencingtobuytoenclosehero
Thefigureaboverepresentsarectangulargardenwithawalkwayaroundit.Thegardenis18feetlongand12feetwide.Thewalk
Bywhatpercentdidthenumberofwrensightingsincreasefromspringtosummer?Giveyouranswertothenearestwholepercent.
Inacertainflowershop,whichstocksfourtypesofflowers,thereare-asmanyvioletsascarnations,and-asmanytulipsas
Theword"civilization"wasjustcomingintouseinthe18thcentury,inFrenchandinEnglish,whenconservativemenofletters
Theword"civilization"wasjustcomingintouseinthe18thcentury,inFrenchandinEnglish,whenconservativemenofletters
随机试题
根据《生产安全事故应急预案管理办法》,生产经营单位的应急预案分为()。
A.巩膜B.虹膜C.脉络膜D.角膜E.视网膜具有屈光作用的是()
子宫内膜异位症痛经的特点是( )
按现行《1:5001:10001:2000地形图航空摄影测量内业规范》(GB/T7930-2008),地形图航空摄影测量中地形的类型不包括()。
根据《中华人民共和国环境噪声污染防治法》对社会生活噪声污染防治的规定,下列选项中正确的是()。
黄河是我国的第二大河,她一路浩荡,奔腾东疏,经九个省区,全长5464公里,似一条金色的巨龙,昂首______在我国北部辽阔的大地上。在古代,黄河流域的自然环境是很______的。那时,这里的气候温暖湿润,土地肥沃,到处是青山绿野,植物种类繁多,为原始人类
根据我国《刑法》的规定,下列行为属于犯罪的是()。
在一个如此欧洲化的地方,欧盟宪法理所当然成了当地的一个焦点话题,令人感到__________的是,这里不是赞成的声音最响亮的地方,而是反对者的天下。填入画横线部分最恰当的一项是:
(2012年真题)按照规则对人们行为限定的范围或程度的不同,可以将法律规则划分为()。
在人类文明发展的进程中,“创新设计”起着重要作用。以奔驰、通用、波音、西门子等为代表的汽车飞机、电力电器设计,引领了现代交通和电气化社会;以英特尔、微软、苹果、联想等为代表的芯片、软件、智能终端设计,造就了信息网络社会的生活方式。这说明
最新回复
(
0
)