
I thought that I would like to draw the picture of transformer form suddenly.
However, I think of none of this end yet.
急にトランスフォームネタがやりたくなった。でもオチ考えてないw
However, I think of none of this end yet.
急にトランスフォームネタがやりたくなった。でもオチ考えてないw
Category All / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 800 x 2045px
File Size 1.21 MB
Say... where's that report from doctor Thurston? I need it for the general review on monday. Wait... you did.... WHAT!?!?! Well how the fuck am I gonna get her notes now?! Is she gonna draw them on the containment room wall? No no... Just... Alright... the beta section of the report will just have to be 'ongoing' yes...
Idiots...
Idiots...
Yeah 've been there done that.
Don't want to see it again, I'm out.
http://fc00.deviantart.net/fs71/f/2.....liamJBoone.jpg
Don't want to see it again, I'm out.
http://fc00.deviantart.net/fs71/f/2.....liamJBoone.jpg
Not as rare as you imply. Certainly STEM fields are male dominated but depending on the specific science field I generally see about 1/10 to 1/3 female scientists. Again varies from field to field with more traditional engineering-type fields (like mechanical, electrical, civil, ect...) being more male dominated and the ratio improving as it reaches more biological fields (including synthetic biology and other bio-engineering fields.) Admittedly this is anecdotal and not based on statistics, which would be the more rigorous approach to addressing your assertion, but I have done research in top tier institutes on two continents now and those observations are pretty consistent everywhere I have worked.
As an unusual example in the current research group where I work (which is synthetic biology focused) the % of staff scientists that are female is over 40%. If you include grad students (not technically scientists as they are pre PhD) then it is actually female dominant with the % of researchers that are female actually a bit over 50%. Admittedly this is unusually high, and if you go beyond this group specifically and start looking at the department wide ratio it drops to around the 1/10 to 1/3 that I recommended as a general guide above.
So yes, STEM fields are predominantly male, but especially in biological sciences women are really not anywhere near as rare as you imply, just in the minority.
As an unusual example in the current research group where I work (which is synthetic biology focused) the % of staff scientists that are female is over 40%. If you include grad students (not technically scientists as they are pre PhD) then it is actually female dominant with the % of researchers that are female actually a bit over 50%. Admittedly this is unusually high, and if you go beyond this group specifically and start looking at the department wide ratio it drops to around the 1/10 to 1/3 that I recommended as a general guide above.
So yes, STEM fields are predominantly male, but especially in biological sciences women are really not anywhere near as rare as you imply, just in the minority.
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