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Girls in ICT 2025 - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

BitDepth#1508

Mark Lyndersay

ON THURSDAY, the Caribbean Telecommunications Union (CTU) hosted its annual Girl in ICT day. This year's theme was "Girls in ICT for inclusive digital transformation" and the CTU chose Shamla Maharaj, a disability advocate, as the event's featured speaker before breaking out an informative panel for discussion of the topic.

Despite events marking this annual attempt to correct gender imbalance in STEM-related jobs and technology work specifically, gender disparity continues to be an issue in the region.

A 2018 Jamaican study, "An Examination of Gender Balance in ICT at Educational Institutions," found that while the gender mix of students sitting the IT examination at CXC was roughly equal, the disparity in gender widened to three male students for every female student enrolled at university level.

Success ratios across genders at graduation evened the disparity only incrementally, with roughly 2.25:1 being the ratio of male to female students graduating.

The results of this study are dramatically better for female IT students in Jamaica than it is for their counterparts in the US and EU.

A 2020 research article investigating "Gender Disparity in Students' Choices of Information Technology Majors" found that while female graduates dominate universities, enrolment and successful female graduates in ICT trail their male counterparts.

The situation is the same in the European Union, where more than half of the university population is female, but just 20 per cent of women graduate with ICT-related qualifications.

A 2024 UNDP Latin America and the Caribbean report places TT at the bottom of the region by percentage of women pursuing STEM studies at university with 27 per cent, but those researchers worked from 2002 statistics.

A 2022 UNDP analysis of regional planning documents examined TT documents from 2003 to 2020 and found that none of them identified girls and women as a disadvantaged sector in ICT.

For Shamla Maharaj, who now works as a product delivery analyst for Scotiabank's English Caribbean region, technology made all the difference.

"Imagine what your life would be without ICT – no internet, no devices, no digital learning, no apps, no access to knowledge opportunity or to each other?" she told attendees at the CTU webinar.

"Now imagine chasing the world with limited mobility or navigating education with barriers at every turn. This was my reality once and for many it's still the case.

"I believed then, as I do now, that if I wanted to move forward, I had to create my own facility. My earliest experience with technology began when I was seven, learning to use a typewriter. Back then I had no idea how deeply the simple act of typing would change my life. It was a doorway, allowing me to transition smoothly into the digital world as computers became more commonplace.

"I'm able to execute my responsibility remotely, delivering results, leading a region-wide initiative and driving inclusion with the same professionalism as if I were seated in any corp

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