A Brand New World In Which Men Ruled (stanford class of '94 and the internet gender gap)
A Brand New World In Which Men Ruled
Instead of narrowing gender gaps, the technology industry created vast new ones for Stanford Universitys pioneering class of 1994.
PALO ALTO, Calif. In the history of American higher education, it is hard to top the luck and timing of the Stanford class of 1994, whose members arrived on campus barely aware of what an email was, and yet grew up to help teach the rest of the planet to shop, send money, find love and navigate an ever-expanding online universe.
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The reunion told a more particular strand of Internet history as well. The university, already the most powerful incubator in Silicon Valley, embarked back then on a bold diversity experiment, trying to dismantle old gender and racial barriers. While women had traditionally lagged in business and finance, these students were present for the creation of an entirely new field of human endeavor, one intended to topple old conventions, embrace novel ways of doing things and promote entrepreneurship.
In some fields, the women of the class went on to equal or outshine the men, including an Olympic gold medalist and the classs best-known celebrity. Nearly half the 1,700-person class were women, and plenty were adventurous and inventive, tinkerers and computer camp veterans who competed fiercely in engineering contests; one won mention in the school paper for creating a taco-eating machine.
Yet instead of narrowing gender gaps, the technology industry created vast new ones, according to interviews with dozens of members of the class and a broad array of Silicon Valley and Stanford figures. We were sitting on an oil boom, and the fact is that the women played a support role instead of walking away with billion-dollar businesses, said Kamy Wicoff, who founded a website for female writers. It was largely the men of the class who became the true creators, founding companies that changed behavior around the world and using the proceeds to fund new projects that extended their influence. Some of the women did well in technology, working at Google or Apple or hopping from one start-up adventure to the next. Few of them described experiencing the kinds of workplace abuses that have regularly cropped up among women in Silicon Valley.
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http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/12/23/us/gender-gaps-stanford-94.html?_r=0