Why do women pursue a PhD in Computer Science?
Erika \'Abrah\'am, Miguel Goul\~ao, Milena Vujo\v{s}evi\'c Jani\v{c}i\'c, Sarah Jane Delany, Amal Mersni, Oleksandra Yeremenko, Ozge Buyukdagli, Karima Boudaoud, Caroline Oehlhorn, Ute Schmid, Christina B\"using, Helen Bolke-Hermanns, Kaja K\"ohnle, Matilde Pato

TL;DR
This study explores gender-based differences in motivations and perceptions among female master students in computer science regarding PhD studies, proposing an intervention to inform and encourage women to pursue doctoral research.
Contribution
It introduces a Women Career Lunch program, develops a multilingual discussion question catalogue, and provides insights into gender-specific factors influencing PhD pursuit in CS.
Findings
Significant gender differences in confidence and career preferences.
Encouraging factors include research involvement and positive perceptions.
Discouraging factors involve uncertainty and perceived job inflexibility.
Abstract
Computer science attracts few women, and their proportion decreases through advancing career stages. Few women progress to PhD studies in CS after completing master's studies. Empowering women at this stage in their careers is essential to unlock untapped potential for society, industry and academia. This paper identifies students' career assumptions and information related to PhD studies focused on gender-based differences. We propose a Women Career Lunch program to inform female master students about PhD studies that explains the process, clarifies misconceptions, and alleviates concerns. An extensive survey was conducted to identify factors that encourage and discourage students from undertaking PhD studies. We identified statistically significant differences between those who undertook PhD studies and those who didn't, as well as gender differences. A catalogue of questions to…
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