Hey, I'm fine with informing people that have an aptitude and interest about how great engineering is (not that you'd think it from the amount of whining on this site;-)), I thought that thread recently about a guy who wanted to do some simple engineering demo at a career day type event was great...
I just think whether they're female or male should be mostly irrelevant.
At least in the UK there were extra sponsorships and the like for females going into engineering. Physics teachers and math teachers etc. would go out of their way to encourage the girls to consider engineering.
Heck, my US wife was encouraged almost to the point of harassment by a math teacher (or maybe it was a lecturer at college) to enter the engineering program based solely on the fact she was reasonable at algebra.
It is probably worth spending a little time wondering why the number of women in engineering hasn't increased the same way it has in medicine and law.
However, starting out with a premise that 'we should have more women in engineering' seems a flawed starting point.
I've seen/read/heard various articles about how
on average womens & mens brains are different and how they tend to do better in certain exercises etc. and how there are trends between male and female children at an early age as which subjects they prefer...
Maybe it's just that generally more men have the required inbuilt biological factors to make them good engineers or want to be engineers or how ever it works.
This certainly shouldn't be used as an excuse to limit opportunities for women though.
The other argument might be because they don't see many female role models in engineering etc, part of the whole nature V nurture argument. Then again, how many male engineer role models do boys see compared to other professions?
Perhaps we need more female engineer role models and more publicity for their achievements, and 'Mrs. Schilling's Orifice' may not be quite the standard bearer we'd want!;-)
Maybe engineers tend to be sexist bigots (you might be forgiven for thinking so given the odd comment in the pub etc.), and that's the issue, if so then some action is probably warranted.
Then again, there are careers that are dominated by women, are equal efforts being made to encourage men into them? Somewhere on 'Nurse-Tips.com' is there a thread about encouraging men to become registered nurses?
Posting guidelines faq731-376 (probably not aimed specifically at you)
What is Engineering anyway: faq1088-1484