As an engineer, my coworkers are overwhelmingly male. So overwhelmingly male, in fact, that I am only one of two women in my department. And to be honest, it’s what I wanted when I started studying Engineering.
When I was 17 years old, I bought into the “it’s better to work with men” stereotype. My head was full of misconceptions about career women: they are catty, gossipy, conniving, and shrewd (except me, of course!). That’s the thing about stereotypes, isn’t it? We never feel like we’re a part of them.
Getting into an Engineering program is difficult, but staying in it is the real challenge. My introductory courses were in a classroom with over 300 students. If I wanted to get an A in the class, I had to outperform at least 80% of my classmates. Competition becomes our way of life. As much as we want to get along and become allies, we have bigger goals. We want to be engineers, we want to work in a renowned company, and we want to make the big bucks. Yet we know that those coveted positions are not as readily available for women.
Employers hold many unconscious biases against women in science. Men are still seen as more qualified and more apt for the sciences. And in an environment already full of men, they just seem like the perfect fit. And that leaves us, women, fighting for what feels like one position. As babies, we are all belligerent. Who hasn’t heard of the “terrible twos?” But as girls get older, they are often conditioned to be nice.We have to play at being nice for so long that we hold our hostilities in and can become indirectly aggressive. As adult women, we rarely punch or kick, but we sure can sulk!
Top Comments
I work in architecture and have never had any issues with women at work, I love working with other females! We always go out of our way to help each other and stick up for each other. I also have great female role models and amazing female directors that I really look up to, and can relate to more than any male directors I have worked with.
Considering how many other posts below seem to have a similar attitude, can mamamia write an article about how awesome it is working with other women? All this negativity is just fuelling a stereotype.
I am a senior associate in a large law firm. I haven't seen that much cattiness - it props up every now and then, but usually not over people being competitive. More just personality clashes. What I have really noticed, however, is that when a man behaves in a certain way he is perceived as having authority and being strong, but when a woman behaves in exactly the same way as that man she is perceived as an aggressive bitch (particularly by the males in the firm). It is very unfair.
I had been a big supporter of our women's mentoring program, but I am seriously considering quitting. I feel like it is tokenism and the firm doesn't really give a damn about changing the (male dominated) status quo. It is a box ticking exercise for certain awards/certifications, but that is about it.
Our program has been running in my office for about 3 years. We would have been far better off getting the partners to do unconscious bias training (across all areas of diversity - not just gender). I think it would have had a much bigger impact. The women's groups just aren't taken seriously - I have had many male partners tell me as much. And let's face it, the status quo works well for the men. Law firms are built on a model that requires most people to drop out before they are senior. At the moment, the women all drop away leaving only the men standing to grab those partnership spots. What incentive is there for them to change what has worked so well for them?
Since I started in our firm as a grad, at least 60% of our grads have been female. There are about 12 senior associates in my practice group. I am the only female senior associate. How the heck can my firm can look at that and not see there is a problem? I feel so disillusioned these days that I feel like giving up myself. But then who is left to put up the fight?