IPPR - Women needed to fill UK’s graduate level engineers gap

25 Sep 2014 01:06 PM
Women make up 42% of UK workforce but only 7% of professional engineering workforce

An additional 87,000 graduate level engineers will be needed in the UK each year between now and 2020 but the higher education system is only producing 46,000 engineering graduates annually, according to a new report from the think tank IPPR, published today. This gap could be closed if more young women opted for careers in engineering. The report shows that the UK has the lowest proportion of female engineering professionals in Europe.

IPPR’s report shows that the critical point at which women are lost to a potential career in engineering is at the age of 16, with the A-level and vocational subject choices made at this age cutting off the pathway into careers in engineering for far more women than men. The report also shows that subject choices at 16 are made on the basis of attitudes and perceptions about engineering that have been formed over many years. The report points to the structure of the 14-19 education in England, which encourages early subject specialisation but does not prepare enough students for higher level technician and graduate studies in engineering.

The report also highlights that family encouragement and knowledge of engineering and engineering careers are important in shaping science aspirations, with 68 per cent of young people aged 11-14 saying that they were influenced by their parents ‘a lot’ when it came to career choice.

The report also finds:

The report highlights that two key areas of concern: the lack of young female students in A-level STEM subjects, which means too few women have the right pre-requisites to consider an engineering or science degree; and the transition from education into employment, where women are not only less likely to enter employment after their degree than men but are less likely than men to enter engineering and technology occupations.

Dalia Ben-Galim, IPPR Associate Director, said: “To better understand the significant shortage of women in engineering, it is important to map out where women, sometimes unknowingly, opt out of engineering career pathways. A large part of the problem is that at the age of 16, many girls remove themselves, which suggests the narrowing of the engineering talent pool starts well before people choose a career. 

“Misconceptions about engineering continue to influence who pursues a career in this field. Engineering is still considered by many as a ‘man’s job’, and is associated with a workplace culture that may put off prospective female workers. These attitudes pose real challenges when attempting to correct the gender imbalances in the sector. To help overcome these barriers in attracting greater female talent to engineering government, schools and business all have a role to play in influencing career choices, and aspirations – particularly at the critical point where school subject choices are made.

“The discrepancy between the number of engineers the UK’s higher education system produces, and how many we need annually shows the UK has a long way to go to fill this potential skills gap. The most effective way to begin to address this gap is to tackle the low uptake of engineering degrees by women, and, further down the line, the continuation into long-term engineering careers.”

The report recommends:

Notes to Editors

IPPR’s new report – Women in engineering: Fixing the talent pipeline – will be available from Thursday 25th September at:http://www.ippr.org/publications/women-in-engineering-fixing-the-talent-pipeline

Contacts

Richard Darlington, 07525 481 602, r.darlington@ippr.org

Sofie Jenkinson, 07981 023 031, s.jenkinson@ippr.org