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http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/414987/1/.html
More female engineers wanted
By Ong Dai Lin, TODAY | Posted: 13 March 2009 0711 hrs
Photos 1 of 1
An engineer from a microelectronics company
SINGAPORE: Twelve-year-old Laura Ong has several ambitions: Writer, doctor, engineer. The Greenridge Primary School student told Today: “I’m attracted to engineering because my father is an engineer.”
On Thursday, she got a little help to decide on her future path. She was among some 100 female students from five schools given a glimpse into what it would be like working as an engineer — a male-dominated career.
Agilent Technologies invited the students, aged 12 to 14, to its “Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day”. The company noted how, in 2007, more than 33,000 males enrolled for engineering sciences courses in polytechnics and universities, but just 11,000 women did so.
Female engineers, it added, are essential to the industry as they look at problems in a more holistic view, considering both internal and external factors before delving into the problem — a finding revealed at a Stanford University conference last year.
Agilent’s general manager, Rob Young, said: “Having more women can bring more diversity to engineering design, and is helpful to push the engineering industry forward.”
Besides talks by female engineers at Agilent Technologies, the students took a laboratory tour and played games that promote electronic concepts.
The event to mark International Women’s Day was in collaboration with the National University of Singapore.
- TODAY/yt
More female engineers wanted
By Ong Dai Lin, TODAY | Posted: 13 March 2009 0711 hrs

Photos 1 of 1
An engineer from a microelectronics company
SINGAPORE: Twelve-year-old Laura Ong has several ambitions: Writer, doctor, engineer. The Greenridge Primary School student told Today: “I’m attracted to engineering because my father is an engineer.”
On Thursday, she got a little help to decide on her future path. She was among some 100 female students from five schools given a glimpse into what it would be like working as an engineer — a male-dominated career.
Agilent Technologies invited the students, aged 12 to 14, to its “Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day”. The company noted how, in 2007, more than 33,000 males enrolled for engineering sciences courses in polytechnics and universities, but just 11,000 women did so.
Female engineers, it added, are essential to the industry as they look at problems in a more holistic view, considering both internal and external factors before delving into the problem — a finding revealed at a Stanford University conference last year.
Agilent’s general manager, Rob Young, said: “Having more women can bring more diversity to engineering design, and is helpful to push the engineering industry forward.”
Besides talks by female engineers at Agilent Technologies, the students took a laboratory tour and played games that promote electronic concepts.
The event to mark International Women’s Day was in collaboration with the National University of Singapore.
- TODAY/yt