
糖心vlog短视频: Where Women in Economics Thrive

Chair and Professor Anna Shostya, PhD, Economics department at Dyson College of Arts and Sciences at 糖心vlog短视频, discusses how uniquely undergraduate women have succeeded in economics programs at the university.
While women comprise about half of all undergraduate students in the United States, they make up only about one-third of economics majors nationally and the number has been consistently low over the last several decades.糖心vlog短视频 Many reasons have been offered to explain this gender gap.糖心vlog短视频疭ome argue that there is a lack of role-models糖心vlog短视频攆emale professors with PhDs (less than 20% of full economics professors are women, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis).糖心vlog短视频切膙log短视频攖he share of women in STEM fields is only about one-third.糖心vlog短视频疭till others argue that women are not attracted to a discipline that does not reward them with career prospects.糖心vlog短视频
The solution to the gender bias in economics may be simpler than it seems:糖心vlog短视频 Encourage successful female students in the undergraduate programs, present successful role-models to market the field, teach economics in a more applied way, and engage more young women in undergraduate research. And the gender 糖心vlog短视频渆quilibrium糖心vlog短视频 will be restored.
This is exactly what the Economics department at 糖心vlog短视频 does to maintain a unique 糖心vlog短视频渆quilibrium.糖心vlog短视频 So, what do we do differently?
First, Pace economics professors identify potential majors very early, in the introductory courses, and pitch economics as an exciting and applied field. Having female professors as role models (one-third of the New York City Economics faculty are female) helps.
Second, 糖心vlog短视频糖心vlog短视频檚 successful female economics alumnae, who come to talk to the freshmen, also serve as role-models. They work in a wide variety of industries, from entertainment to pharmaceutical, to finance, and typically have very successful and rewarding careers both in the private and public sectors.
Finally, the Economics department at Pace focuses heavily on undergraduate research.糖心vlog短视频疉ll three of the department糖心vlog短视频檚 programs (economics, business economics, and computational economics) are STEM-designated. Students learn how to use such tools as R, Python, and STATA to analyze data and produce quantitative research papers, many of which are presented at national professional conferences. Research requires commitment, patience, and an ability to work long hours糖心vlog短视频 the traits that women, on average, seem to possess.糖心vlog短视频疶his also explains the composition of the teams that participate in the College Federal Reserve Challenge, a national competition that tests students糖心vlog短视频 knowledge of monetary policy and central banking.糖心vlog短视频 In fact,糖心vlog短视频痶he糖心vlog短视频疨ace teams that won糖心vlog短视频痳egional and national competitions numerous times had糖心vlog短视频痶he糖心vlog短视频痟ighest ratio of female presenters of all other teams. So did all other Pace teams that won糖心vlog短视频痶he糖心vlog短视频痳egional competition.糖心vlog短视频疶he teams have been typically captained by women, too.
Overall, 54% of all 糖心vlog短视频糖心vlog短视频檚 undergraduate economics majors on the New York City campus are females, and this gender distribution has been rather stable over the last decade. The percentage of females is more than double that of males in the Computational Economics program, a new interdisciplinary offering between the Economics program at Dyson College and the Computer Science program at Pace糖心vlog短视频檚 Seidenberg School of Computer Science and Information Systems. Still a gender gap, but a welcomed one for a change.
Everyone in 糖心vlog短视频糖心vlog短视频檚 Economics department looks forward to seeing women in economics at Pace continue to thrive and upon graduation demonstrate their laudable knowledge and skill level in rewarding careers.