Wednesday, 20 May 2015

Draft: Mash Up

It is important to establish definitions of the problem/issue of the status of women. Women engineering students go to the same classes, take the same tests and get the same GPAs as men, sometimes even higher.  We’d like to think a structural definition attributes women’s status to factors beyond individual characteristics had already become a voice for humanitarian design. The sad truth is that women in our study developed less confidence in their engineering expertise than men did. Concerns about human resources and/or social equity in science and engineering have resulted in programs to enhance the participation and performance of women.

Over the coming years, gender equality or neutrality heralded a rise in awareness around humanitarian design. Equity is the most direct way to Architecture for Humanity’s success.  Women and men engineering students could promote collective learning and increase the success of the humanitarian design movement as a whole. It could help broaden student’s often narrow conceptions of architecture to include skills and awareness.

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