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*Excuse any duplication - Sharing a recent report from Bayer Corporation on
STEM careers, discouragement towards women & minority scientists / best, kw*
*
*
*News Release*
*Bayer Corporation*
100 Bayer Road
Pittsburgh, PA 15205-9741
Phone: 412 777-5200
www.BayerUS.com

*US women and minority scientists discouraged from pursuing STEM careers,
national survey shows*


http://bayerfactsofscience.online-pressroom.com/download/lead_release.zip

*PITTSBURGH, MARCH 22, 2010 -- Significant numbers of today's women and
underrepresented minority chemists and chemical engineers (40 percent) say
they were discouraged from pursuing a STEM career (science, technology,
engineering or mathematics) at some point in their lives, according to a
new Bayer Corporation survey.*

*U.S. colleges are cited by them as the leading place in the American
education system where discouragement happens (60 percent) and college
professors as the individuals most likely responsible for the discouragement
(44 percent).*


The U.S. K-12 education system falls short, too. On average, the survey
respondents give it a "D" for the job it does to encourage minorities to
study STEM subjects and a "D+" for girls.

The Bayer Facts of Science Education XIV survey polled 1,226 female,
African-American, Hispanic and American Indian chemists and chemical
engineers about their childhood, academic and workplace experiences that
play a role in attracting and retaining women and underrepresented
minorities in STEM fields. "If we want to achieve true diversity in
America's STEM workforce, we must first understand the root causes of
underrepresentation and the ongoing challenges these groups face," said Greg
Babe, President and CEO, Bayer Corporation. "We want to knock down barriers.
If we can do that, we'll be able to develop the attitudes, behaviors,
opportunities and resources that lead to success."
*
*
*Other major findings include:*

— Regardless of gender, race or ethnicity, interest in science begins in
early childhood. Nearly 60 percent of the respondents say they first became
interested in science by age 11. This parallels the findings of a 1998 Bayer
Facts survey of American Ph.D. scientists, which included white men. In that
survey, six  also reported interest in science by age 11.

— More than three-quarters (77 percent) say significant numbers of women
and underrepresented minorities are missing from the U.S. STEM workforce
today because they were not identified, encouraged or nurtured to pursue
STEM studies early on.

— The top three causes/contributors to underrepresentation in STEM include
lack of quality science and math education programs in poorer school
districts (75 percent), persistent stereotypes that say STEM isn't for girls
or minorities (66 percent) and financial issues related to the cost of
education (53 percent), according to the survey respondents.



*U.S. Women and Minority Scientists Discouraged from Pursuing STEM*
*Careers, National Survey Shows*
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U.S. Women and Minority Scientists Discouraged – 2

— They say science teachers play a larger role than parents in stimulating
and sustaining interest in science. During the elementary school years, 70
percent of the respondents say teachers have the most influence. During high
school, 88 percent say teachers do.

— Nearly two-thirds (62 percent) of those polled say underrepresentation
exists in their
company's/organizations/institution's workforce.

— Leading workplace barriers for the female and minority chemists and
chemical engineers include managerial bias (40 percent),
company/organizational/institutional bias (38 percent) and a lack
of professional development (36 percent), no/little access to networking
opportunities (35%), and a lack of promotional/advancement opportunities (35
percent).

— Nearly three-quarters (70 percent) of the chemists/chemical engineers say
it is harder for women to succeed in their field than it is for men, while
more than two-thirds (67 percent) think it is more difficult for minorities
to succeed than it is for non-minorities.

— Across the board, respondents give their
companies/organizations/institutions a "C" for having women and
underrepresented minorities in senior positions to serve as role models and
mentors for the younger employees.

"This and previous Bayer Facts surveys confirm something I've long known –
that interest in science is genderless and colorless," said Dr. Mae C.
Jemison, astronaut, medical doctor, chemical engineer and Bayer's longtime
Making Science Make Senseฎ spokesperson. "All children have an innate
interest in science and the world around them. But for many children,
that*interest
hits roadblocks along an academic system that is still not blind to gender
or color.*
*
*
"*These roadblocks have nothing to do with intellect, innate ability or
talent*," said Dr. Jemison. "*On the contrary, they are the kinds of larger,
external socio-cultural and economic forces that students have no control
over.* As students, they cannot change the fact that they do not have access
to quality science and math education in their schools. But adults can. And
we must."

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*Survey Methodology*
*
*
The survey, conducted by Pittsburgh-based research firm Campos Inc., polled
a total of 1,226 Caucasian women, Asian women, African-American men,
African-American women, Hispanic men, Hispanic women, American Indian men
and American Indian women. For each group, a minimum number of interviews
were established to determine any statistically significant differences
among the groups. This was done to reveal commonalities and differences of
experiences among the groups. Based on this sample size, the statistical
reliability achieved is +/-3 percent margin of error at a 95 percent
confidence level.

*About Bayer Corporation*

Bayer Corporation, headquartered in Pittsburgh, is a subsidiary of Bayer AG,
an international health care, nutrition and high-tech materials group based
in Leverkusen, Germany. The company's products and services are designed
to benefit people and improve their quality of life. At the same time Bayer
creates value through innovation, growth and high earning power. The
Corporation is committed to the principles of sustainable development and to
its role as a
socially and ethically responsible corporate citizen. Economy, ecology and
social responsibility are corporate policy objectives of equal rank. In
North America, Bayer had 2009 net sales of approximately 7.7 billion euros
(about $10.7 billion) and employed 16,300 at year end. For more information,
go to www.bayerus.com.

-more-
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*U.S. Women and Minority Scientists Discouraged – 3*
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*
Formalized in 1995, Making Science Make Sense is Bayer's national
award-winning initiative to advance science literacy through hands-on,
inquiry-based science learning, employee volunteerism and public education.

Note for Journalists: Visit the online press room
http://bayerfactsofscience.online-pressroom.com/ for all of the Bayer Facts
of Science Education survey materials. The site contains the survey's
Executive Summary, related side bar stories, survey participant quote sheet,
a link to past Bayer Facts surveys, images and broll footage.

Contact:
Bryan Iams, phone: (412) 777-5200
E-mail: [log in to unmask]

*Forward-Looking Statements*
This news release may contain forward-looking statements based on current
assumptions and forecasts made by Bayer Group or subgroup management.
Various known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors could
lead to material differences between the actual future results, financial
situation, development or performance of the company and the estimates given
here. These factors include those discussed in Bayer's public reports which
are
available on the Bayer website at www.bayer.com. The company assumes no
liability whatsoever to update these forward-looking statements or to
conform them to future events or developments.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Karen Weaver, MLS, Adjunct Faculty, Cataloging & Classification, The iSchool
at Drexel University, Philadelphia PA email:
[log in to unmask] Electronic Resources Statistician,
Duquesne University, Gumberg Library,
Pittsburgh PA email: [log in to unmask]

*"Not everything that can be counted counts, and*
*not everything that counts can be counted."*
*--Albert Einstein *