Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Women Hold up 'Half the Sky' in China's Scientific Research !

Women Hold up 'Half the Sky' in China's Scientific Research

Time:2024-05-29 02:33:01 source:Stellar Stories news portal
Contact Us People / Inspiring Women

Women Hold up 'Half the Sky' in China's Scientific Research

 March 10, 2022
Women Hold up 'Half the Sky' in China's Scientific Research
Click the photo and watch the video.

 

BEIJING, March 9 (Xinhua) — China has been taking action to foster the career growth of women in science, an area where they are still underrepresented worldwide.

Yu Xinwei, a national political advisor, delivered a proposal during the ongoing annual session of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, the top political advisory body, suggesting that the "she" workforce in scientific innovation should be strengthened.

Yu, once a researcher on new techniques in producing fine chemicals, called for more women-oriented policies that help women in science break the "glass ceiling."

A UNESCO survey in 2019 showed that only an average of 29.3 percent of researchers in science worldwide are women.

In China, about 40 percent of human resources in science and technology are those of the fair sex, and they accounted for more than half in Internet and biomedical areas, according to China Association for Science and Technology.

Wang Qihui, a researcher of the Institute of Microbiology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, co-hosted a forum on Tuesday, International Women's Day, in Beijing to discuss opportunities and challenges of women scientists.

"It has still been a pyramid structure for women in science," said Wang. "There is no shortage of women science workers, but we tend to see fewer associate professors and professors."

In June last year, the Ministry of Science and Technology and other organizations issued a document to redress the imbalance. It proposed to set up women scientists-led projects in key national research plans and relax age restrictions for women in task and fund application.

The institutions are encouraged to establish a "return" fund to help pregnant and breastfeeding women come back to science work, according to the document.

More and more women scientists in China have broken the "glass ceiling." Wang Yaping, the first woman who worked in China's space station, has become one of the most inspiring figures for the young generation.

Beate Trankmann, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Resident Representative in China, told Xinhua that Wang overcame numerous challenges as a girl from a rural family in Shandong Province to finally realize her dream, making her a role model that can indeed inspire greater participation from women in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM).

Han Xiqiu, China's first woman chief scientist of ocean scientific expeditions, is another example. "It's difficult to say, as a girl, we have unique advantages, but girls can do what boys can," said Han. She led a team to tap the resource potential of the deep sea, a job once confined to men only.

Wang Yingjun, a professor of material with the South China University of Technology, expanded her lab from one with a dozen square meters in the 1980s to a national engineering center with over 20,000 square meters.

She still remembered the origin of her first sum of scientific research funds, about 300 U.S. dollars given by her husband. Now her team has obtained tens of millions of dollars from the national funds.

Huawei, China's telecommunication giant, opened a page about women in Huawei on its official website. In the page heading is a statement titled "Science for her, science by her and science with her."

Huawei selected 10 outstanding women in the company, among whom are a 5G lady and an engineer who ramped up digital skills in Kenya.

"The careers and achievements of women scientists alone are a testament to the fact that women can be equally successful in industries that have traditionally been associated with men," said Trankmann.

 

(Source: Xinhua)

32.3K

Please understand that womenofchina.cn,a non-profit, information-communication website, cannot reach every writer before using articles and images. For copyright issues, please contact us by emailing: [email protected]. The articles published and opinions expressed on this website represent the opinions of writers and are not necessarily shared by womenofchina.cn.


Comments

Magazines

Projects

2023 Women Science and Technology Innovation Pioneer...

Photos

People Enjoy Blooming Tulips in Jinan, East...
Flowers Bloom Across China in Spring

Special Coverage

  • Happy International Women
  • Celebrating 13th National Women
Related information
  • All change! Premier League undergoes postseason managerial upheaval with Maresca set for Chelsea
  • Lucy Hamilton: Connecting cultures through the power of poetry
  • Congo landslide kills at least 15 people and up to 60 others are missing, officials say
  • Defending champion Nuggets finish second in West, beating Grizzlies 126
  • Nigeria government cracks down on illegal Lithium mining operations
  • Steve Clifford wins final game as Charlotte coach, Hornets beat playoff
  • Fine arts students paint beautiful artworks in village in C China's Hubei
  • Over 2,000 participate in New Year hiking event in central China
Recommended content
  • Teenagers Yamal and Cubarsi included in young Spain squad for European Championship
  • Night school classes win youngsters' hearts in Wuhan, C. China's Hubei
  • Chinese embassy in U.S. hosts Discover Beijing Opera cultural event
  • Steve Clifford wins final game as Charlotte coach, Hornets beat playoff
  • Military labs do the detective work to identify soldiers decades after they died in World War II
  • China registers progress in crackdown on cultural relic crimes