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Autori principali: Arvola, Ine, Håndlykken, Rakel, Kozyri, Elisavet
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.06731
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author Arvola, Ine
Håndlykken, Rakel
Kozyri, Elisavet
author_facet Arvola, Ine
Håndlykken, Rakel
Kozyri, Elisavet
contents Diversity among computer scientists and technologists is necessary for the sustainable development of society through technological innovation. At UiT The Arctic University of Norway, only 13% of computer science students are women. Many find the learning curve in introductory computer science courses to be very steep, and thus, they drop out. Female students tend to be overrepresented in this group. The goal of this project was to improve the gender balance among computer science students at UiT by focusing on female first-year students and ensuring that they do not drop out of the study programs in the first year of study. The project established a seminar series for strengthening the basic programming-technical skills that many first-year students lack, and exposing them to different aspects and career paths within the computer science subject beyond the focus area of the study program. Results show positive developments, particularly related to the students' perceived introduction to basic technical topics. A comparison between 2024 and 2025 shows improvements in several of the areas addressed in the technical workshops, including use of file systems, terminals, debugging and the code development process. However, effects on dropout and study experience require more long-term measures.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_06731
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Better Balance in Informatics 2.0: The First-Year Students
Arvola, Ine
Håndlykken, Rakel
Kozyri, Elisavet
Computers and Society
Diversity among computer scientists and technologists is necessary for the sustainable development of society through technological innovation. At UiT The Arctic University of Norway, only 13% of computer science students are women. Many find the learning curve in introductory computer science courses to be very steep, and thus, they drop out. Female students tend to be overrepresented in this group. The goal of this project was to improve the gender balance among computer science students at UiT by focusing on female first-year students and ensuring that they do not drop out of the study programs in the first year of study. The project established a seminar series for strengthening the basic programming-technical skills that many first-year students lack, and exposing them to different aspects and career paths within the computer science subject beyond the focus area of the study program. Results show positive developments, particularly related to the students' perceived introduction to basic technical topics. A comparison between 2024 and 2025 shows improvements in several of the areas addressed in the technical workshops, including use of file systems, terminals, debugging and the code development process. However, effects on dropout and study experience require more long-term measures.
title Better Balance in Informatics 2.0: The First-Year Students
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.06731