Computer Programming Women
Computer Programming Women
In 1967, despite the optimistic tone of Cosmopolitans Computer Girls article, the
programming profession was already becoming masculinized. Male computer
programmers sought to increase the prestige of their field, through creating professional
associations, through erecting educational requirements for programming careers, and
through discouraging the hiring of women. Increasingly, computer industry ad campaigns
linked women staffers to human error and inefficiency.
At the same time, new hiring toolsincluding tools that were seemingly objectivehad
the unintended result of making the programming profession harder for women to enter.
Eager to identify talented individuals to train as computer programmers, employers relied
on aptitude tests to make hiring decisions. With their focus on mathematical puzzlesolving, the tests may have favored men, who were more likely to take math classes in
school. More critically, the tests were widely compromised and their answers were
available for study through all-male networks such as college fraternities and Elks lodges.
According to Ensmenger, a second type of test, the personality profile, was even more
slanted to male applicants. Based on a series of preference questions, these tests sought
to indentify job applicants who were the ideal programming type. According to test
developers, successful programmers had most of the same personality traits as other
white-collar professionals. The important distinction, however, was that programmers
displayed disinterest in people and that they disliked activities involving close personal
interaction. It is these personality profiles, says Ensmenger, that originated our modern
stereotype of the anti-social computer geek.
Computer programming today
Today, we continue to assume that the programmers are largely anti-social and that antisocialness is a male trait. As long as these assumptions persist, says Ensmenger, the
programming workforce will continue to be male-dominated. Although the stereotype of
the anti-social programmer was created in the 1960s, it is now self-perpetuating.
Employers seek to hire new recruits who fit the existing mold. Young people self-select into
careers where they believe they will fit infor example, women currently comprise 18% of
computer science undergraduate majors, down from 37% in 1985.
By uncovering the history of women programmers, Ensmenger seeks not only to remind
us of womens forgotten contributions to the computing field. More broadly, he is
interested in the process of how and why the field became predominantly male. The fact
that stereotypes embedded in advertisements and hiring practices had such a profound
effect on masculinizing this profession, says Ensmenger, also sheds light on what can be
done to reverse the trend, making programming and other computer professions more
open to women.
Margaret Hamilton standing next to listings of the actual Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC)
source code. She eventually became the director and supervisor of software programming for
the Apollo and Skylab space programs.