mechmama
Mechanical
- Jan 22, 2007
- 61
I admit this sounds like a SWE forum topic, but we were discussing at work how many women engineers go part-time, decide to stay home, or moved to peripheral roles at their companies (like marketing) after having kids. I looked at my own company's org chart and realized that ALL the female managers are in peripheral departments, and while there are 20% female mechanical engineers on the bottom half (close to what I remember having in school), there are 10% in the top half.
Does this sound like the typical make-up at other companies?
Do you feel that many women just aren't cut out for project management or higher-level engineering? (And those that are, do stay)
Are companies losing good talent by not retaining women, or is it just natural selection?
Would women do better if they didn't have the kids' pictures on their desks, take approved time off for kids' functions, etc.? Even if the male management does the same?
I am interested to hear the honest male perspective. Obviously no one at work would say negative things to my face!
Does this sound like the typical make-up at other companies?
Do you feel that many women just aren't cut out for project management or higher-level engineering? (And those that are, do stay)
Are companies losing good talent by not retaining women, or is it just natural selection?
Would women do better if they didn't have the kids' pictures on their desks, take approved time off for kids' functions, etc.? Even if the male management does the same?
I am interested to hear the honest male perspective. Obviously no one at work would say negative things to my face!