
Translated with DeepL
Individual support programmes are not enough - systemic changes are needed from education to the world of work. The key recommendations for action include
"Better coordination and strategic development of STEM promotion are levers for optimising existing measures. At the same time, they also ensure the broadest possible impact."
Susanne Metzger, Universität Basel"Approaches that are still underutilised, such as gender budgeting, according to which funding and funding initiatives also take gender equality into account, could also ensure that the proportion of women and girls in STEM professions increases."
Isabelle Collet, Universität GenfThe study was commissioned by SERI as part of postulate 22.3878 "Report and strategy to increase the proportion of women in STEM professions" and was written between January and October 2024. The methodology of the study includes literature analyses, statistical analyses and focus groups with stakeholders from education, politics and business. The aim of the study was to formulate effective recommendations for action for education policy and STEM stakeholders.
Edith Schnapper (SATW)
Isabelle Collet (University of Geneva), Susanne Metzger (University of Basel, PH FHNW), Lora Naef (University of Geneva), Theres Paulsen (SCNAT, a+), Edith Schnapper (SATW), Stefan Vonschallen (PH FHNW)
The series of articles accompanying the publication sheds light on the complex topic of STEM promotion from various perspectives:
These FAQs provide a compact overview of key topics and facts from the original text. It helps to summarise important content in a comprehensible way, clarify key statements and provide targeted answers to frequently asked questions.
Social norms, gender stereotypes and a lack of female role models mean that girls often identify less with STEM and underestimate their abilities.
Curricula, teaching materials, the attitude of teachers and school organisation have a significant influence on whether children - especially girls - develop an interest in STEM.
Educational decisions are strongly influenced by social expectations. Boys tend to favour technical and production-related professions, girls social and service-oriented fields.
Lower self-confidence, stereotypical ideas about technical professions, sexism in everyday training and working life and a poorer work-life balance act as a deterrent.
Effective measures include early support, targeted programmes for girls, mentoring, quotas, gender-sensitive teaching, role models and changes to the institutional framework.
Through practical lessons, playful learning, experimental formats, reference to the real world and conveying the meaning and social relevance of technical professions.
Notwendig sind vielfältige Zugänge zu Inhalten, barrierefreie Angebote, gendersensible Sprache und Didaktik sowie gezielte Ansprache unterrepräsentierter Gruppen.
Children from educationally disadvantaged or socio-economically disadvantaged families have fewer opportunities for STEM education - for example due to a lack of prior knowledge, language barriers or limited access to support programmes.
There is a clear imbalance between vacancies and available skilled labour, particularly in IT, technology and engineering - especially at university of applied sciences and vocational training level.
What is needed is a coordinated STEM strategy, structural gender equality measures, promotion of work-life balance, targeted investment in education and training and better visibility of STEM contributions in society.