The Scottish Mail on Sunday

University quiz’s biggest challenge: attracting women!

- By Katie Hind SHOWBUSINE­SS EDITOR

SIX years ago University Challenge quizmaster Jeremy Paxman asked why so few women made it on to the long-running BBC2 show.

Now, with the latest series under way, The Mail on Sunday can reveal that the disparity in numbers between male and female competitor­s has still not improved.

The former Newsnight presenter told finalists in 2015 to expect tough questions, then added: ‘Few tougher, perhaps, than why on earth are there no women left in this stage of the competitio­n?’

Just two years after the comments by Paxman, there was another all-male final between Wolfson College, Cambridge and Balliol College, Oxford.

And so far in the current series, which started in July, only 17 out of 64 contestant­s who have taken part were women – just 26 per cent.

Last week’s contestant­s Exeter University failed to field a single female, while their opponents, Manchester, boasted one – medical student Alice Irving, from Peterborou­gh, the team captain.

The previous season featured even fewer females. Out of 112 participan­ts in the series, only 24 were women or 21 per cent of competitor­s, while 2019/20’s intake was 25 per cent female and the year before it was 27 per cent. The series that ran from 2017 to 2018 featured a mere 22 women – just 19.6 per cent of the contestant total.

The contestant­s are not selected by the BBC but by their universiti­es, which hold quizzes to pick their team line-ups.

Rose McKeown, a star of the 2017 winning team from St John’s College, Cambridge, blamed online abuse when asked for a reason why women steered clear of the show.

She said: ‘The most obvious one is, unfortunat­ely, the hostility that some female contestant­s are subjected to on social media but also there may be an issue with women underestim­ating themselves and being hesitant to try out for the show.’ Hannah Rose Woods, captain of the 2015-2016 winning team from Peterhouse, Cambridge, also said that there was a ‘confidence gap’ between genders.

‘There’s a huge confidence gap between men and women which makes women far less likely to put themselves forward to audition at university level,’ she said.

In 2018, University Challenge introduced ‘gender-neutral’ questions following complaints from viewers. Executive producer Peter Gwyn said questions would be framed in a way that made it impossible to tell if they were written by a man or woman.

A BBC spokesman said: ‘We will always do everything we can to encourage more women to take part as contestant­s. While the make-up of each team is ultimately decided by the university it represents, we encourage all teams who apply to reflect the diversity of their student population, and we will continue to look at how we can work with universiti­es to help them with this.’

ITV Studios, which make the show for the BBC, said yesterday it has appointed a casting director to help team organisers recruit more women.

A University Challenge spokesman said: ‘Viewers will see an increase in diverse teams across the current series.’

 ?? ?? GENDER RIDDLE: Paxman
GENDER RIDDLE: Paxman

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