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<!-- Women in IT page --><html><head><title>Web-sters' Net-Work: Women in Info Technology</title><!-- Owner_name="Jerome McDonough, School of Library and Information Studies" --><!-- Owner_info="University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720" --><LINK rev=made href="mailto:jmcd@lucien.berkeley.edu"></head><body BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" LINK="#aa1111" VLINK="#770044"><!-- Begin WWWomen WebRing Fragment With Graphics--><font size=2><!WA0><a href="http://www.wwwomen.com/webring.shtml"><!WA1><IMG SRC="http://lucien.berkeley.edu/womring.gif" target=_top ALIGN=LEFT BORDER=0> </a> <!WA2><a href="http://www.webring.org/cgi-bin/webring?id=17&ring=women&next" target=_top > <!WA3><IMG SRC="http://lucien.berkeley.edu/wringnxt.gif" align=right border=0> </a> <center>This <!WA4><a href="http://www.wwwomen.com/webring.shtml" target=_top>WWWomen WebRing</a> site is owned by <!WA5><a href="mailto:jmcd@lucien.sims.berkeley.edu">jmcd@lucien.sims.berkeley.edu</a>. <br>Click for the [ <!WA6><a href="http://www.webring.org/cgi-bin/webring?id=17&ring=women&next" target=_top>Next Page</a> ] <br>Want to join the ring? Click here for <!WA7><a href="http://www.wwwomen.com/webring.shtml" target=_top>info</a>. <br></center></font><!-- End Webring Fragment With Graphics--><br><br><hr><p><center><H1>Web-sters' Net-Work</H1><!WA8><IMG SRC="http://lucien.berkeley.edu/spidr_silk1.gif" ALT="Large Pretty Web Graphic"></a><H2>Women in Information Technology</H2></center><p><H3>SHAMELESS PLUG:</H3> <H4> You <b>haven't</b> bought a copy of<!WA9><a href="http://cyberwerks.com:70/0/wired_women/index.html">Wired_Women:Gender & New Realities in Cyberspace</a>? Then stop staring atthis dopey web browser and go buy it <b><i>NOW</i></b>!!!</H4><p><hr><p>"<b>Webster</b> <i> n</i> [(derived fr. OE <i>webbestre</i> femaleweaver--<i>Webster's</i>): "A weaver ... as the designation of awoman"--<i>O.E.D.</i>] : A woman whose occupation is to Weave, Esp aWeaver of Words and Word-Webs. <i>N.B.:</i> The word <i>Webster</i>was Dis-covered by Judy Grahn, who has written: "Webster is a wordthat formerly meant "female weaver," the "ster" ending indicating afemale ancestor, or female possession of the word. The word-weaversof recent centuries have given us the oration of Daniel Webster andthe dictionary listings of Merriam-Webster stem from English familynames that once descended through the female line. Somegreat-great-grandmother gave them her last name, <i>Webster</i>,she-who-weaves.""<P>-- <i>Websters' First New Intergalactic Wickedary ofthe English Language</i>, conjured by Mary Daly in cahoots with JaneCaputi.<P><hr><p><!WA10><a href="http://www.pointcom.com/"><!WA11><IMG SRC="http://lucien.berkeley.edu/5percsmt.gif" ALT="Top 5%Point Comm. Corp. Logo" ALIGN=left></a>I'm hoping to have this page provide an annotated list of sources relating to/useful for women in the fields of library & information science,computer science, and information technology (particularly those stillenmeshed in the halls of academia). If you know of any othersources that you think ought to be here, or want to make other suggestions on the page's presentation or organization, please send me mail at<!WA12><a href="mailto:jmcd@lucien.SIMS.Berkeley.EDU">jmcd@lucien.SIMS.Berkeley.EDU</a>. Thanks!<p><hr><p><H4>Table of Contents</H4><ul><li><!WA13><a href="#new">New Things to Look For</a><p><li><!WA14><a href="#meta">META-RESOURCES</a> -- One Stop Shopping for Info. on Women & Technology<p><li><!WA15><a href="#biblio">BIBLIOGRAPHIES</a> -- Sources for bibliographic and archival information on women and computing<p><li><!WA16><a href="#directories">DIRECTORIES</a> -- Finding other women on the web<p><li><!WA17><a href="#status">WOMEN'S STATUS IN CS & IT</a> -- Papers on women's status within computing and technical fields (not available through Meta-Resources above)<p><li><!WA18><a href="#organizations">ORGANIZATIONS</a> -- Organizations (academic, professional, & political) devoted to women in computing and information technology.<p><li><!WA19><a href="#career">CAREER & FUNDING INFO.</a> -- Where to find jobs and other sources of money<p><li><!WA20><a href="#alternative">E-PRESS</a> -- Women (and the occassional man) pressing the digital envelope<p><li><!WA21><a href="#news">NEWSGROUPS & LISTS</a> -- Ongoing discussions of women and information technology<p></ul><p><!WA22><IMG SRC ="http://lucien.berkeley.edu/line.web.gif"><p><a name="new"><b>New Things To Look For</b></a><br>(descriptions below)<P><ul><li><!WA23><a href="http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~holman/FTF/ftf.html">ALA's Social Responsibilities Round Table Feminist Task Force</a> (check under NEWSGROUPS & LISTS)<li><!WA24><a href="http://www.women-online.com/wo.html">Women Online</a> (check under E-PRESS)<li><!WA25><a href="http://www.wim.org/">Women in Multimedia</a> (check underORGANIZATIONS)<li><!WA26><a href="http://www.wcmh.com/wic/previous/96top100.html">Women in Computing's 1996 Top 100 Women in Computing</a> (check Women in Computing's entry underE-PRESS)<li><!WA27><a href="http://www.wwwomen.com/category/comput1.html">WWWomen: Women in the Age of Computers</a> -- Part of a larger, yahoo-like search directory for women (Listed under META-RESOURCES).<li><!WA28><a href="http://www.virago-net.com/brillo/">BRILLO Extra Abrasive</a> -- New and Interesting Publication (see E-PRESS section). Check out their initial issue, Armed & Dangerous, particularly the Rant.</ul><p><hr size=4 width=50% align=center><p><a name="meta"><b>META-RESOURCES</b></a><br><i>One Stop Shopping for Information on Women and Technology</i><dl><dt><!WA29><a href="http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/ellens/gender.html">Women andComputer Science</a><p><dd>Run by Ellen Spertus, this is probably one of the best places to look for information regarding women in information technology fields.It includes pointers to her own writings on women in computer science (including "Why Are There So Few Female Computer Scientists?") and thoseof several other women, as well as pointers to several other majorresources dealing with the issues of women and minorities intechnology and academia.<p><dt><!WA30><a href="http://www.cs.yale.edu/HTML/YALE/CS/HyPlans/tap/tap.html">TAP:The Ada Project</a><p><dd>The Ada Project at Yale provides a variety of useful resources,including extensive bibliographies on various issues relating to women in technology, lists of Calls forParticipation in Upcoming Events, Fellowship & Grant information,conference information, and lists of organizations and discussiongroups that may be of interest.<p><dt><!WA31><a href="http://www.mit.edu:8001/people/sorokin/women/index.html">WomenHomepage</a><p><dd>The work of another MIT'er, Jessie Stickgold-Sarah, this is full of pointers to documents relating to women incomputer science and engineering, as well as to documents on Women's Studies programs andwomen's centers, women in academia and industry, gender & sexuality,women's health care, and more.<p><dt><!WA32><a href="http://mevard.www.media.mit.edu/people/mevard/women.html">Women's Guide to the Internet</a>.<P><dd>Still more from MIT (we suspect it's something in the water, but we'renot sure), courtesy of Michele Evard.<p><dt><!WA33><a href="http://gertrude.art.uiuc.edu/wits/witshomepage.html">Women, Information Technology, and Scholarship Colloquium</a> at Univ. of Illinois<p><dd>"The Women, Information Technology, and Scholarship (WITS) colloquium, sponsored by the Center for Advanced Study, is an interdisciplinary group of women faculty, academic professionals, and graduate students on the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign campus, working to help insure that new communications technologies will be structured and used in ways beneficial and equitable for all." This site has an excellent annotated bibliographyon women and information technology available (see Bibliography sectionbelow), lists of publications by <!WA34><a href="http://gertrude.art.uiuc.edu/wits/members.html">WITS Members</a>, and a list of upcoming events.<p><dt><!WA35><a href="http://www.cs.rpi.edu:80/~walkere/pipelink/">PipeLINK</a> -- connecting women across the C.S.Pipeline.<p><dd>"The goal of PipeLINK is to attract high school girls to computerscience, and to retain interested girls and women in the computer sciencepipeline from high school through the Ph.D." PipeLINK is supported bya grant from the NSF, and sponsors a variety of mentoring activitiesand workshops. PipeLINK operates out of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.<p><dt><!WA36><a href="http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/projects/wivc/index.html">The Octavia Project: collecting resources for the online study of gender and technology</a><p><dd>Funded by the U.K.'s Economic & Social Research Council, The OctaviaProject (maintained by <!WA37><a href="http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/academic/R-Z/socst/N_Wakeford.html">Nina Wakeford</a> and Rachael Parry) contains links divided bymajor areas of people, places, journals, papers, and projects. The collectionof papers may prove particularly useful to those researching women and technology, as it provides a single list of useful research papers available at several different sites.<p><dt><!WA38><a href="http://tampico.cso.uiuc.edu/~chris/women/">Women: Computing & Networking</a><p><dd>A very well-organized page put together by <!WA39><a href="http://tampico.cso.uiuc.edu/~gressley/">Chris Gressley</a> at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Contains major subdivisions of Published Articles, Papers & Talks, Projects and Programs, Academia, and miscellaneous Related and Local Resources. A good complement to the Octavia Project above for obtaining research papers on women and computing.<p><dt><!WA40><a href="http://www.ifias.ca/gsd/gstpmap.html">International Gender, Science and Technology Policy Information Map</a><p><dd>One of several 'maps' produced under the auspices of the <!WA41><ahref="http://www.ifias.ca/">International Federation of Institutes forAdvanced Study (IFIAS)</a>, Sophia Huyer put together this list ofresources "to facilitate policy research and collaboration on issuesrelating to gender, science and technology policy at national,regional, and international levels. It is divided into major areas ofWomen in international science & technology, Women in science &technology -- North America and Europe, Policy institutes, agencies &organizations, Social and environmental implications of science &technology, University programmes, career support in gender, science &technology, and General women's resources and information.<p><dt><!WA42><a href="http://www.femina.com/femina/computers">FeMiNa -- Women & Computers</a><p><dd>This is a sub-page of the <!WA43><a href="http://www.femina.com/">FeMiNa</a> service, "the first comprehensive World Wide Web based directory and informationresource containing information exclusively for and about women and girlsonline." FeMiNa provides pointers to WWW information in the general areasof Art, Business, Computers, Culture, Education, Entertainment, Feminism,Girls, Health, Lesbians/BiSexuals, Organizations, Politics, Publications,Resources, Women, and Writing. The Women & Computers subpage provides a list of the major resources available on the WWW of interest to womenin computing, including many resources not specifically devoted to women,such as "Web Digeset for Marketers," and the Dictionary of Smileys.<p><dt><!WA44><a href="http://www.winternet.com/~ameliaw/">NrrdGrrl!</a><p><dd>A page for those of you who've been told you're "too smart, too loud,too opinionated, too tall, too short, too fat, too thin, too brash, too shy,too sexy, too plain, too bitchy, too nice, too needy, too aloof, too weak,too strong, too independent, too sensitive, too serious, too fickle, too cute, too silly, too demanding, too much...." Includes NrrdGrrls directory,news on NrrdGrrl events, a collection of links to other sites, as wellas the NrrdGrrl FAQ and Manifesto. If you're fed up with other people'sexpectations regarding you, this is your site.<p><dt><!WA45><a href="http://www.pleiades-net.com/">Pleiades Network</a><p><dd>"...a focal point for women's information and dialog on the WorldWide Web. Our goal is to encourage women's access to and use of the Internetby creating a space that is dedicated to women." Includes a section onInternet tools (including both search tools and Pleiades' own illustratedguide to the Internet), A bulletin board service for conversation onvarious topical areas, directories of both individuals and organizations,a calendar of upcoming events, and classified ad services.<p><dt><!WA46><a href="http://www.cs.umd.edu/~gibson/wim.html">Women in Mathematics</a><p><dd>A page on a similar theme to this one, but devoted to women inthe mathematics community,can be found at the Univ. of Maryland. It includes information onhow to obtain their newsletter, on surviving graduate school, whereto find Internet information on women in mathematics (and othertechnical fields).<p><dt><!WA47><a href="http://www.itlabs.umn.edu/dean/women/">University of Minnesota: Women in Technology Home Page</a><p><dd>This page is devoted to trying to provide information about resourcesfor women in all of the various technological sciences, and so has informationfor women in more than just the information technology field(s). It includesinformation about the various technical programs at Univ. of Minnesota(including various engineering fields, biosciences, chemistry, math, physicsand astronomy), as well as pointers to various other pages devoted to womenin the sciences and professional societies.<p><dt><!WA48><a href="http://clix.net/clix/wwwomen/">WorldWideWomen</a><p><dd>Check under the Incredibly Expanding Hot List link to find linksto a variety of links on women in computer science and technology, women's studies, and more.<p><dt><!WA49><a href="gopher://porpoise.oise.on.ca/11/resources/IRes4Ed/resources/gender/Gender%20Issues%20in%20Technology">Gender Issues in Technology</a><p><dd>A gopher run by the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education in Toronto, Canada, it provides pointers to both summaries and full text of variousarticles dealing with the themes of gender issues in computer, in designand technology, and in networking.<P><dt><!WA50><a href="http://www.wwwomen.com/category/comput1.html">WWWomen: Women in the Age of Computers</a><p><dd>Part of a larger, yahoo-like search directory specializing in resources for women. The "Women in the Age of Computers" section specially marks all women-owned businesses on the page (helpful for those of you searching for a company to hire). WWWomen also runs a conferencing area on women in computingwhich you can find at <!WA51><a href="http://www.wwwomen.com/bbs3/wwwboard.htm">WWWomen: Women in the Age of Computers Forum</a>.<p><dt><!WA52><a href="http://www.science.unimelb.edu.au/cielle/women/wucs.html">WomenUndergrads in Computer Science</a><p><dd>Provided by <!WA53><a href="http://www.science.unimelb.edu.au/cielle/html/index.html">KiriWagstaff</a> at the University of Melbourne, this page includes information oninternships, scholarships, conferences, useful organizations, resources, and mailing lists, and the obligatory "cool" page.Has some information for graduate students as well.<p><dt><!WA54><a href="http://www.women-online.com/wo.html">Women Online</a><p><dd>Provided by Amy Goodloe, Women Online "has evolved into an onlineforum for all women on the internet. In addition to providing themany resources you'll find here on the Women Online web site, we alsospecialize in Web Site Design for women-owned businesses." A very goodsite to check for information on mailing lists and newsgroups relevantto women's issues in general, and women interested in technology inparticular. Also have a look at <!WA55><ahref="http://www.lesbian.org/lists/">The Internet-Women MailingLists</a>, and the great page for <!WA56><ahref="http://www.lesbian.org/">Lesbian.org</a> that Amy hascollected.<p>
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