At a time when women account for half of the college-educated
workforce but constitute just 29 percent of the workforce in science
and engineering occupations, Raytheon Technologies and Girl Scouts of
the USA (GSUSA) are collaborating on a new initiative to fuel the pipeline of female leaders in science, technology,
engineering, and math (STEM).
Through a multiyear commitment from Raytheon Technologies, GSUSA launched its first national computer science program for middle and high school girls, and piloted its first-ever national Cyber Challenge for middle school and high school girls. These initiatives have the potential to reach nearly half a million girls in grades 6–12, many of them from military families, and they aim to prepare more girls to pursue computer science careers, including in cybersecurity, robotics, data science, and artificial intelligence.
This is the right action at the right time with the right partners. For example, the majority of millennial women say they would’ve been more interested in a cybersecurity career if they’d had access to more information about and training in STEM during middle and high school, according to a 2017 survey commissioned by Raytheon, Forcepoint, and the National Cyber Security Alliance. In addition, findings from the Girl Scout Research Institute’s How Girl Scout STEM Programs Benefit Girls (2016) (PDF) reveal that girls who participate in Girl Scout STEM programs are significantly more interested in pursuing a STEM career upon program completion than they are prior to starting such a program.
The initial phase of the computer science program ran as a pilot in select geographies in early 2018, with national implementation beginning in fall 2018, and the Cyber Challenge was piloted in October 2019 at 10 councils, and is now rolling out nationally. During the event, girls participated in a series of adrenaline-filled challenges to address a fictional ransomware attack on the moon. The girls worked in teams alongside volunteers from Raytheon Technologies, local universities, and other organizations, applying methods in fields ranging from cryptography to forensics to encryption. The event helped girls see themselves as potential science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) professionals who could one day close the gender gap between men and women who work in these fields.
About Raytheon Technologies
Raytheon Technologies Corporation is an aerospace and defense company that provides advanced systems and services for commercial, military and government customers worldwide. With 195,000 employees and four industry-leading businesses ― Collins Aerospace Systems, Pratt & Whitney, Raytheon Intelligence & Space and Raytheon Missiles & Defense ― the company delivers solutions that push the boundaries in avionics, cybersecurity, directed energy, electric propulsion, hypersonics, and quantum physics. The company, formed in 2020 through the combination of Raytheon Company and the United Technologies Corporation aerospace businesses, is headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts.