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Like most people, my first day of university was a flurry of excitement, nerves and new faces. I joined the thousands of men and women swarming across the campus on their way between classes. But as I approached my first engineering lecture, I noticed a shift in the crowd. The women continued walking past, and more and more men lined up outside the theatre.
I had heard about the gender divide in engineering, but it doesn’t really hit you until you are sitting in a lecture of hundreds and see the number of women attending in the tens.
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This divide isn’t just reflected in the student body.
Throughout my four-year course, I had one female lecturer for maths and one for a communication subject. That’s it. No female lecturers taught the technical engineering subjects.
The labs were held in old buildings where the female toilets could only be found on every second floor. Every floor had at least two male toilet locations, while every second floor only had one. To be fair, the new buildings being built were not gender biased and had enough facilities for all, but at the time it’s hard not to feel excluded when you have to go to a different location just to pee.