Content Spotlight
'I have learnt so much from indigenous and traditional approaches to health’ – Dr Vivien Rolfe [Interview]
Dr Vivien Rolfe is a gut physiologist who specialises in herbal and nutritional interactions with the human body.
•Figures have shown a 3.1% increase in women enrolling in science-based subjects from 2017 to 2019.•Most women chose to study subjects allied to medicine (229,895 enrollments in 2018/2019).•The science degree least sought after by women is veterinary sciences.•The degree which sees the highest percentage increase (11.6%) in female students is computer sciences.•The UK is just below the EU average for the number of women enrolled in science and tech.
March 5, 2020
From Marie Curie and Rosalind Franklin, to the contemporary Cori Bargmann, women have contributed immensely in the world of science and technology. And while it used to be, and still is, a male-dominated industry, the number of women choosing to study related degrees is growing year by year. In fact, in the UK, figures from HESA (Higher Education Statistics Agency) have shown a 3.1% increase in women enrolling in science subjects from 2017/2018 to 2018/19.
Research conducted by The Knowledge Academy finds that the science subjects most sought after by women are allied to medicine. In fact, there were 560,530 undergraduate enrolments in 2017/2018. This number has spiked by 0.9% in the following years, taking the number of women studying subjects allied to medicine to 229,895. According to HESA, fields of interest include: anatomy & physiology, pharmacology, pharmaceutics, nutrition, ophthalmics, audiology, nursing and medical technology.
With only 6,110 undergraduate women enrolled in this course in the year 2017/2018, Veterinary sciences are deemed the least sought after science degree sought by women. However, there is some good news as this number spiked by 6.7% the following year.
Interestingly, the degree which sees the highest percentage increase in female students is Computer sciences —11.6%. This is followed by Agriculture & related subjects (7.8%) and as previously highlighted, Veterinary sciences with 6.7%.
When it comes to a wider view, figures from Eurostat have shown that out of the total percentage of people in science and tech in the EU, 41% of them are women. When it comes to the UK, there are 40.7% women in the industry.