News Release

From programming a calculator to activist professor for gender equality

Norwegian-Italian researcher recognized for comprehensive efforts on gender equality

Grant and Award Announcement

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Boosting gender balance in top research positions

image: Letizia Jaccheri, a professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology's Department of Computer Science, helped launch the IDUN project, designed to help women in computer science and other tech fields at the university to become full professors. Jaccheri has won a Norwegian award for her gender equality efforts. view more 

Credit: NTNU

If you ask Letizia Jaccheri what got her interested in computer science as a young girl, she has two ready answers: The first is Pisa, the town in Italy where she was born. Here, engineers built Italy's first home-grown computer, supported by entrepreneur Adriano Olivetti.

The second was a math teacher who taught her, as a 16-year-old, to program a simple handheld Texas Instruments calculator. It was such an important milestone that she even remembers the model number of the little machine, a TI-57.

"I have, over the years, reflected a lot about this journey," Jaccheri said. But she has done more than simply reflect. Over the decades, along with her work as a professor of computer science at NTNU, the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, and as an adjunct professor II at UiT The Arctic University of Norway, she's founded and nurtured a number of initiatives to bring more women into the tech industry.

On Friday, Jaccheri was selected as the 2021 winner of a Norwegian Oda Prize, which recognizes exceptional women who have made concrete contributions to increase diversity in the technology industry.

"Letizia Jaccheri is an impactful professor and role model. Through her work in academia and computer science she inspires female academics and young technology enthusiasts to take action," the judges wrote. "Letizia inspires to lead the change. She is recognized for her ability to coach other women to take on bigger opportunities."

The non-profit organization, which has more than 10,000 members and is supported by 50 different industry partners, says the winners of the award are "are good ambassadors for the values of ODA: Inspiration, Bravery, Empowerment and Passion."

Jaccheri's own start in academia was at the University of Pisa, where she took a master's degree in informatics and where nearly half of all her fellow students were women. She also had an exchange year at NTH, one of NTNU's predecessors in 1989.

"Many of the professors, at least the young ones, were also female," she said.

When she was employed by NTNU in 1997, she found a university that wanted to improve its gender diversity and that had set up a number of programmes to ensure that more women were welcomed into technology-related fields.

"NTNU stated clear goals, employed an advisor for gender equality who worked full time for gender equality in academia," she said. "NTNU started projects like The Girl Project Ada, which has been conducted for more than 20 years by several excellent project leaders and a generation of female students."

The Ada project recruits female students for studies in computer science, communication technology, cybernetics and robots, electronic system design and innovation, informatics and mathematics. There's early outreach for high-school girls, networking, and support to make sure that girls who are accepted to one of these academic disciplines don't drop out.

Jaccheri herself has started and is involved in initiatives to increase diversity in the technology industry, including the IDUN Project, funded by Research Council of Norway and NTNU, Trondheim ACM's Women in Computing Chapter, the European Network for Gender Balance in Informatics (EUGAIN) with participants from 38 countries, and the "Code Trail (Kodeløypa)" where young people learn about programming.

All these efforts have paid off.

"I have observed at my own Department of Computer Science the number of female students has grown from 6% in late 1990s to more of 30% master students and 50% PhD students in recent years," Jaccheri said.

Across Europe, those numbers are less encouraging, she said. The European research project she's leading, EUGAIN, shows that more than 80% of students enrolling or graduating with a bachelor's degree in informatics are male; when it comes to PhDs from all but a handful of European countries, less than 25% of the graduates from ICT programmes are women.

Jaccheri said that it's critical that society include women in all areas of research, but especially science and technology, because it makes a difference in people's lives.

"My topic of research is software engineering. If the goal is to provide software that will improve the life for everyone in society, everyone has to be involved in the creation of the software requirements and the implementation, testing, deployment of software," she said. "In technology, there are a number of examples of technology that provide solutions for men that do not work for women. We are changing this."

Jaccheri's own research is currently focused on how IT processes have to be changed to include more women.

"Making development processes more inclusive will result in more inclusive and powerful software products," she said.

And even though Norway is making progress on meeting the goal of having women make up 40 per cent of the ICT workforce, Jaccheri says there's much more work to be done, both in her adopted country and internationally. The two large research projects, IDUN and the European-wide project EUGAIN, should help with that.

"We have to evaluate the actions we are doing in the different countries, to compare, collate and develop efficient tools for speeding up the inclusion processes in computer science," she said. "It is part of my plan to give back, not least to Italy, for the good education and the good start in life I have been so lucky to get."

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