Women are under-represented in a number of career sectors
including science, technology, engineering and maths and the business select committee
is pressing ministers to launch a nationwide careers service to address this
under-representation.
The committee's chair, Adrian Bailey MP said: "We need
to change the culture in schools which in so many cases presume there is a set
of career paths for women. A young
person's influences are their peer group, teachers and parents. It's breaking
into these groups to make them aware of the breadth of opportunities available
that will make the difference."
The report highlighted inadequacies in the careers advice
offered to young women and said the government should set targets for
encouraging women into apprenticeships into sectors such as science,
technology, engineering and maths where they are perennially under-represented.
The committee shared some worrying facts including the fact that
only 20% of A-level physics students are girls, only 5% of fellows at the Royal
Society of Chemistry are women and that women represent just 12% of workers in the
field of astronomy.
The government has two months to respond to the report
findings.
The full report on women in the workplace can be downloaded
at the following link: