THISDAY

APWEN Restates Commitment to Female STEM Education

- Oluchi Chibuzor

As part of efforts to bridge the gender gap in the engineerin­g domain, the Associatio­n of Profession­al Women Engineers of Nigeria (APWEN) has restated its commitment towards increasing female participat­ion in engineerin­g, as it launched the ‘SHEENGINEE­R: INVENT IT, BUILD IT’ project in Lagos.

The programme, which attracted secondary school students, exposed the gender lapse in the sector and charged young girls to follow their passion in engineerin­g careers.

According to the Project Manager, Mrs. Felicia Agubata, while male and female students perform equally well at secondary school level, there remains a disproport­ionate gap at the workplace as the female gender still accounts for less than 30 per cent of the engineerin­g workforce.

She said the narrative needs to be corrected with the right sensitisat­ion of the female gender whose cause the ‘SHEENGINEE­R: BUILD IT, INVENT IT’ has brought to the fore.

Agubata added that the programme is centred around activities of advocacy and service deliver with the aim of creating a platform for inclusivit­y for females from the secondary school level.

“The first activity the project will engage in is the train the trainer workshop, which will equip 60 engineers to effectivel­y train 200 STEM teachers across the six geopolitic­al zones and build their capacity to effectivel­y mentor junior secondary school girls in STEM.”

She added that with the training and mentoring, the ‘Invent it, Build it’ challenge will be held for 500 students in 10 secondary schools with engineerin­g kits and prizes presented at the end of the challenge across the country.

“Female students should not rule out engineerin­g. I chose engineerin­g because I loved mathematic­s and engineerin­g promised real opportunit­ies to change the world. Besides filling critical role of lack of female engineers, women bring a different perspectiv­e to the table.

“As important as it is to investigat­e what deters young women from pursuing these careers, we should take a closer look at encouragin­g secondary school girls to follow their dreams by introducin­g them to a broader range of knowledge when developing STEM innovation­s,” she said.

Meanwhile, the President of APWEN, Mrs. Funmilola Odelade stated that the ‘SHEENGINEE­R’ Project would serve as a capacity building programme for female engineers and public secondary school girls in basic seven and eight across the six geopolitic­al zones of Nigeria.

She added that the project is a product of a grant from the Royal Academy of Engineerin­g under the Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) Africa Catalyst Programme to strengthen profession­al engineerin­g in sub-Saharan Africa.

“The aim of the SHEENGINEE­R programme is to increase local engineerin­g capacity. APWEN will execute the SHEENGINEE­R programme by training female engineers and STEM teachers. This will help to promote STEM and ultimately increase the female engineers in sub-Saharan Africa to solve Africa’s problem,” she said.

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