A good place to start would be to look at the gender distribution of
graduates in IT-related college courses for the major universities.
Just get yourself a copy of a college yearbook and see how many
computer science graduates are men and how many are women. That's one
starting point. Another point would be to ask nicely major IT shops
(ISP's, tech companies, and so forth) for the same information on
their employees, then maybe you could write a feature article
somewhere describing your basic research... :)
>> Maybe that could be one factor. But the truth is, correct me if I'm
wrong, that only 60% or below BSCS or any related course graduates are REAL
programmers and who worked as he/she should be. This is my personal
observation when I was still in College (Cebu City). And there are several
people who are not BSCS or any related course graduates that are now
programmers.
_
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