Location
Hilton Hawaiian Village, Honolulu, Hawaii
Event Website
https://hicss.hawaii.edu/
Start Date
3-1-2024 12:00 AM
End Date
6-1-2024 12:00 AM
Description
Unlike many STEM fields, data science has emerged with online communities serving as prominent spaces for professional development and learning. This paper explores factors that contribute to gender differences regarding perceptions of satisfaction and difficulty in a learning initiative for data science hosted by the Kaggle community. We investigate multiple factors: prior experience and skills, professional role, and communication within a learning community. Our results, based on a survey of 2,707 aspiring data scientists, suggest that learners who identify as women do not perceive assignments to be more difficult than men, but complete fewer assignments. The increasing difficulty of the learning experience affected all learners, but men were still able to complete the hardest assignments at a higher rate than women despite experiencing similar barriers. Overall, the findings demonstrate how learning initiatives in technically intensive domains contribute to different outcomes between groups.
Recommended Citation
Twyman, Marlon and Majchrzak, Ann, "Introducing Women to Data Science: Investigating the Gender Gap in a Learning Initiative on Kaggle" (2024). Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences 2024 (HICSS-57). 4.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/hicss-57/sj/stem/4
Introducing Women to Data Science: Investigating the Gender Gap in a Learning Initiative on Kaggle
Hilton Hawaiian Village, Honolulu, Hawaii
Unlike many STEM fields, data science has emerged with online communities serving as prominent spaces for professional development and learning. This paper explores factors that contribute to gender differences regarding perceptions of satisfaction and difficulty in a learning initiative for data science hosted by the Kaggle community. We investigate multiple factors: prior experience and skills, professional role, and communication within a learning community. Our results, based on a survey of 2,707 aspiring data scientists, suggest that learners who identify as women do not perceive assignments to be more difficult than men, but complete fewer assignments. The increasing difficulty of the learning experience affected all learners, but men were still able to complete the hardest assignments at a higher rate than women despite experiencing similar barriers. Overall, the findings demonstrate how learning initiatives in technically intensive domains contribute to different outcomes between groups.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/hicss-57/sj/stem/4