What happened to the girls who studied computer?

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Reprinted from: CodeSheep

If I hadn't read the comment section a few days ago, I wouldn't have known there were so many girls here.

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Because the gender ratio of our friends here is very metaphysical all the year round, it has been almost kept at about 9 to 1 before. It has been slightly better recently, barely able to account for 12%.

I remember when I was in college, I was majoring in communication engineering. There are 117 people in the class, 80 boys, which accounts for almost 70%, and the remaining girls are about 30%, but it is reasonable to say that this number is quite a lot, after all, it is a full 30%.

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It's absurd when it comes to a master's degree.

I don't remember the class data, but I remember a room full of boys in the lab, occasionally mixed with one or two female classmates. Every time a new school starts, when a junior sister moves into the lab, everyone sits up and feels uneasy. In the past, our senior brothers also began to help clean the table, move the chair, and install the computer.

Hey, you can make up your own mind about that picture.

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It can be seen that there are still very few science and engineering girls like us in the communication/electronics/computer category (the biochemical ring material is not well understood, so I don't know the situation).


Back to the topic of working after graduation, everyone must be curious about the employment situation of girls.

The actual situation is that the girls who graduated from the laboratory in the same class went to the Internet, the senior sister went to a certain aerospace institute, and two female students who graduated a year earlier with a master's degree also went to the Internet, the other went to a communication factory, and They are all R&D positions, so they all go to work in technology, and they have developed very well in their respective positions.

There are also some female developers that I have come into contact with in the past few years, and there are even two technical leaders of the team. All in all, I don’t see much difference between the girls in this area. The technical ability and the degree of hard work are completely different. No less than boys.

So in the past two years, I have communicated with some female readers, and everyone is generally worried about whether the development can be done well.

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Just happened to have seen this question on Xhu some time ago, " How are the girls who study computer? "

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It is estimated that everyone is also curious about this question, so I selected a few good answers from the above.


lavender meow : Bachelor and master are computer science and technology. The four of us sleep in the undergraduate course, and we have basically won the national award, and all of them have been guaranteed research. When we calculated the ranking of Baoyan University, 6 of our top ten majors were girls.

Now that it is less than two years after graduating from a master's degree, everyone is basically in the domestic first- and second-tier Internet companies, and they continue to write code. I should continue to write in the future.

Many people have a prejudice against girls learning computers. However, there are really many girls who write code well.

It's just that after marriage, most girls are more family-oriented because of pregnancy and childbirth, and their energy is not as much allocated to work as boys, so girls are relatively rare among technical leaders.

I hope more and more people can treat girls who study science and engineering fairly. Logical thinking, rational thinking and gender have nothing to do with it. Girls who are studying computer science and other science and engineering subjects, please strengthen your confidence and keep going as long as you love it.


Qingfeng Yixian: Let's put it this way, the ratio of males to females was 7:1 when I majored in computer science. Our class has 32 students and 4 females, which is a standard male-to-female ratio. It should be said that girls who major in science and engineering usually do things very geographically (compared to those who study literature), and basically they can stand alone when they go out. Do, sometimes act like a man more than a man, this is the girl I know who studies computer.

If you are looking for a computer girlfriend, you still need to look at the boy's original character. If it is typical machismo, then I think you'd better find a girl with a bit of artistic bacteria and literature. Generally, they are more emotional, so they need someone to protect. If boys are not chauvinistic in nature, looking for girlfriends is like looking for partners, then girls who study computer are very good, it depends on the individual. Later, they should all become a species between men and women!


Anonymous user: I am a girl who studies computer science. I am currently a junior and plan to take a postgraduate entrance examination. I chose this major because I am very interested in this major. Now, except for the lack of self-discipline that I hate and I haven't completely overcome it, everything else is fine.

One of my roommates has a different situation. She doesn't like this major. She didn't choose computer, but her parents. After going to college, I have been seeking freedom, but unfortunately I didn't train myself to fly to the sky, so I still think she is still a little naive, maybe I am too realistic. She said that she doesn't like this major, so maybe she will find a major that has nothing to do with computer. After all, there are very few people who can finally be engaged in computer career.

In fact, I am quite naive, but I prefer more realistic people. So I like my other roommate a lot most of the time. Except when she talks.

Another roommate of mine is the one that I am quite envious of - after I went to college, I became financially independent on a part-time basis (I wanted to do it but I didn't), learned self-discipline on the basis of life rules (I struggled for this for a long time), made a lot of friends (I knew I should Make friends, make one more friend for more news, but I'm too autistic for me), and clear goals. However, she regretted that she chose the wrong major, and she felt that she should choose software engineering. (Accounting and soft engineering are really two completely different majors)

What I regret is that I didn't grasp the time well, I didn't plan my own learning route, and I always followed the school's training plan, but it was obviously not enough. I am now worrying about my internship in two months, because the undergraduate course is all basic and cannot keep up with the needs of enterprises.

I knew I had to work hard after college, but I didn't do enough, so the freshman year was miserable. Maybe it was because I didn’t understand the employment pressure of this major at the beginning, or maybe I thought I could handle it with half the effort in high school (but not at all, because of some bad habits in learning—it’s easy to fall asleep when I’m bored in class, indulge in novels, and absolutely nothing. Not taking the initiative to find out what I'm studying; I had to work harder than high school to get over it).

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