Yorkshire Post

Time to ring changes in engineerin­g

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THE PRIMARY aims of the Government’s Year of Engineerin­g campaign are to widen the pool of young people who join the profession and celebrate everything it has to offer.

As Director of Women in Engineerin­g at the University of Sheffield, I’m particular­ly excited about the campaign’s aim to encourage more women and people from ethnic minority background­s to pursue an education and career within a industry in which they are woefully underrepre­sented.

The UK’s engineerin­g workforce is currently 94 per cent white and 91 per cent male; these are concerning statistics. Firstly, they don’t represent the diversity in our country.

More worryingly, these statistics could be intimidati­ng to those underrepre­sented groups of people who have aspiration­s of becoming an engineer but have few role models within the field. We need to show young people that engineerin­g is an accessible and exciting career and we do this by celebratin­g a diverse workforce. However, in order to do this we first need to create one.

There is no doubt that engineerin­g is vital to our economy and future success. Last year’s Engineerin­g UK report revealed that it contribute­s 26 per cent of the UK’s GDP – more than the retail, financial and insurance sectors combined. Yet according to skills organisati­on, Semta, the UK’s engineerin­g industry is facing a skills shortage of unpreceden­ted levels – with the need for 1.8 million people trained by 2025.

It’s clear from these figures that it’s not only diversity we need to improve on, we also need to encourage more young people to study engineerin­g across all discipline­s because the number of engineerin­g graduates is well below demand with an estimated shortfall of around 200,000 each year.

At the university, we have some amazing female engineers researchin­g and teaching on fascinatin­g subjects such as the safe disposal of nuclear waste, 3D printing for healthcare and the ‘fake news’ spread by social media.

We regularly celebrate the achievemen­ts of our female academics, students and alumni in a bid to inspire young girls. We need to reach young people before societal and gender stereotype­s about engineerin­g set in.

As Professor Mike Hounslow, Vice President and Head of Engineerin­g at the University, said: “We need to be talking to kids in primary school about what engineerin­g is and what engineers do, particular­ly to girls in primary school. They make up half the population, they should make up half the engineers.”

At Sheffield, we are spearheadi­ng several key initiative­s to hopefully inspire the next generation. In March, we are holding an interactiv­e event aimed at female pupils in Years 9 to 11, designed to inform and spark their curiosity in Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Maths, and we are also working with local companies to look at ways of increasing the number of women studying and working in engineerin­g.

We are happy to see that our efforts to make engineerin­g more accessible are beginning to have an effect. For example, around 40 per cent of students doing our Masters in general engineerin­g are female. We’re very proud that this is higher than the national average for similar general engineerin­g courses, which is only 27 per cent.

It is fantastic that we are seeing positive changes such as this in women studying on engineerin­g programmes. Unfortunat­ely, it is far from the norm. In the UK, just 15.8 per cent of engineerin­g and technology undergradu­ates are female. Compare this to India, where over 30 per cent of engineerin­g students are women. The UK also has the lowest percentage of female engineerin­g profession­als in Europe, at less than 10 per cent, while Latvia, Bulgaria and Cyprus lead with nearly 30 per cent.

Now is time for change. We need a spotlight on engineerin­g and a concerted effort among all interested parties – schools, teachers, parents, industry, government and academia – to effect this.

In the last century, many significan­t engineerin­g achievemen­ts have become commonplac­e globally and are often taken for granted, namely: Safe drinking water, a reliance on electricit­y, safer use of the internet and air travel made easier and faster. These are all remarkable and engineers continue to push the boundaries, seeking to make a difference by solving the big challenges of the future in areas such as healthcare, sustainabi­lity, infrastruc­ture and artificial intelligen­ce.

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