WomenTech Educators Online Training and Support
A Proven System for Increasing the Number of Women and Girls in Your Science, Technology & Engineering Classes |
Attention: This online training is for administrators, teachers, professors, instructors, counseling staff, and outreach and recruitment staff connected to any ATE project or center.
How Many Women Are in Your Science and Technology Classrooms?
Not enough?
Get more women in the picture!
Increase the number of women in your Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) classrooms with the strategies you’ll learn through the WomenTech Educators Online Training. Based on proven practices, the workshop training curriculum includes the “best-of-the-best” of our strategies, culled from our four National Science Foundation projects and over 17 years of success in assisting educational institutions in recruiting and retaining female students in programs around the country. Our CalWomenTech Project was highlighted by the National Science Foundation for demonstrating significant achievement and program effectiveness.
ONLINE TRAINING STARTS FEBRUARY 27, 2012
Space is limited. Application deadline: February 15, 2012.
Apply Online Now
Does the WomenTech Educators Training Work? Yes!
Schools that have implemented the strategies you'll learn through this system have seen remarkable results. At San Francisco City College's Computer Networking and Information Technology program, female enrollment has risen from 18% to 33%. Initially, less than 65% of the female students completed the computer program. Using the IWITTS system, they turned around those results so now more than 85% of female students complete their classes.
Read on as I share how I helped schools nearly double their enrollment of female students and dramatically increase retention of both their female and male students. I'll show you how your school can do this, step-by-step, with practical strategies you can put into action right away.
From: Donna Milgram, Executive Director
Which way to turn? (Donna's story)
It's Donna here. I know it's frustrating when you've made efforts to get more women and girls into your science and technology classes, and you're stuck because you don't actually see increases in enrollment and disappointment sets in. Your passion for increasing the number of women and girls in STEM starts to fade.
I know because I've worked with educators to whom this has happened. They have a strong commitment, perhaps they have given a workshop or some kind of career activity, and they haven't seen the kinds of results they are looking for.
One educator asked me in frustration, "Where do I start the recruiting process? How can I make our programs more attractive to females? Do I need to alter my teaching style, my explanations of the subject matter, my labs to help female students be more successful?"
I understand this kind of frustration, especially if the advice you've been given is very general or long-term. You're a really committed educator, and you want your female students to be as inspired by STEM as your male students. So I was yearning to provide educators with the direction they need.
That’s why I developed the WomenTech Educators Online Training.
~Pierre Thiry, Principal Investigator, Mid-Pacific ICT Regional Center, San Francisco, CA |



See below for eligibility.
In the WomenTech Educators Online Training, you will learn:
- The #1 secret to increasing the number of women in your classes
- The top three recruitment strategies -- according to the women themselves
- Why changing your thinking isn't enough, and what you can do about it
- The critical thing women want to hear up front that will keep them engaged throughout your course
- 3 simple techniques you can implement tomorrow so your female students will excel in the lab
Who should attend:
Administrators, teachers, professors, instructors, counseling and outreach and recruitment staff 1) that are ATE grantees or 2) nominated by the American Association of Community Colleges or the League for Innovation in the Community College. The Online Training will be capped at 25 participants.
Here are just some of our past ATE clients:
- Consortium for Alabama Regional Center for Automotive Manufacturing
- Midwest Center for Information Technology, AIM Institute, Omaha, NE
- South Carolina Advanced Technological Education National Resource Center for Engineering Technology Education, Florence-Darlington Technical College, Florence, SC
- Convergence Technology Center, Frisco, TX
- Technology and Innovation in Manufacturing Education Center, Baltimore, MD
- Nevada Information Technology Education, Community College of Southern Nevada
- Center for the Advancement of Process Technology, Mainland College, Texas City, TX
- Diversity in Engineering Technology, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Doing it piecemeal: It just doesn't work
We have found that schools that implement one, two or even three gender equity tactics don’t see an increase in enrollment. Doing it piecemeal doesn’t work. That’s why we’ve developed our WomenTech Educators Online Training with Support. The full system is contained in the multi-week online training and the six Support and Strategy sessions. It’s the full system that enables you to get the kind of results that you see above. When you work with IWITTS, you’ll see how well the full system can work for your school.
WomenTech Educators Online Training Content
You will take away (learning outcomes):
- An easy-to-implement recruitment plan that will greatly increase the number of women and girls in your STEM classrooms.
- A retention plan for your school that will increase the completion rate of your female (and male students), starting this semester.
- The knowledge and confidence you need to put these plans into action, right away.
Training agenda and learning objectives include:
Discover our proven, road-tested system for increasing the number of women and girls in your STEM classes, which was highlighted by the National Science Foundation.
- Explore gender-specific learning styles: Find out how to excite and engage female students in technology by teaching to their learning style and help female students be successful in the lab.
- Discover your number one strategy that will help boost your female enrollment (that costs little or nothing and doesn’t take a lot of time to implement). Learn how to set up your students for success from Day One in your program so they can have a successful start and the confidence that comes with it.
- Learn how to overcome the challenges of engaging and retaining female students when their numbers in classes are still small.
- Develop a customized action plan for increasing the number of female students in your school and making sure they stay.
- And so much more!
Schedule/Time Required:
- Time period: 10 weeks for training program (Feb 27-May 4, 2012).
- Hours required: 1 hour per week including developing YOUR recruitment & retention plan.
- Training format: Presentations, handouts and exercises online, available to watch and complete at your convenience each week.
- Live question and answer training calls in weeks 5 and 10.
- Exclusive online community forum to connect with other training participants.
- After the training: Long term support for implementation includes 6 monthly live Support and Strategy sessions (May-November 2012) of 45-60 minutes each.
- Archives: All calls and sessions recorded and archived for one year.
FREE takeaway ($150 value):
Just for signing up, you will receive the Women in Technology Outreach Kit. The kit includes easy-to-customize outreach materials like brochures, flyers and a PowerPoint presentation. This is the starter kit you have been looking for to help you increase the number of women in your school's technology programs.
Come to the training in a team:
The more people that you can get involved in this campaign, the more lasting change you're going to have. Yes, one teacher on their own can get more women in the classroom, but the schools that have been the most effective and had lasting institutional change have had more people involved. Together, you and your team members will work together to develop an action plan and provide support to each other as you implement it.
~ Peter Woodberry, PhD, Dean of Business, Science and Technology at Community College of Rhode Island |

See below for eligibility.
After the WomenTech Educators Online Training:
Long-term support for implementation
Keep training participants and your educational institution as a whole focused on your goal of increasing the number of women in STEM. You and your colleagues have many competing priorities for your time. With this ongoing support, you’ll receive help as you work as a team to implement the recruitment and retention plans that you develop in the training. In our successful CalWomenTech Project, the external evaluators found that along with the training, support for implementation was one of the top two most important things that helped schools achieve their impressive recruitment and retention results.
You will receive:
➤ Six Group Support and Strategy Sessions
You’ll have direct access to your trainer, Donna Milgram, on live group sessions to get answers on your specific questions about increasing the number of women in your programs. Donna will help you brainstorm, strategize and troubleshoot, and keep you focused on implementation. Schools that have received this type of long term support have found that it was extremely effective in moving them from plan to action, and ultimately helping them see significant gains in the number of women in their classrooms. |
➤ Exclusive Online Community Forum:
All of the educators who attend the online training will be granted access to a private members-only website. Be a member of our community whose culture is one of positive change around increasing the number of women in STEM. The culture of our online community is, “We can do it!” |
➤ Downloads of all Support and Strategy Sessions
Downloads of Support and Strategy sessions will be emailed to participants and promptly posted to your members-only website. In this way, all of the online training participants can listen at anytime, even if they cannot make the live session. Files are typically posted within 24 hours. |
~ Jessica J. du Maine, Assistant Professor/Program Coordinator, Electrical/ Electronic Engineering & Technology, St. Louis Community College, St. Louis, MO |

See below for eligibility.
About Donna Milgram, Your WomenTech Educators Trainer:
![]() |
Donna Milgram, the Executive Director of the National Institute for Women in Trades, Technology and Science (IWITTS), has conducted national and state trainings and workshops in 43 states. She is the Principal Investigator of the CalWomenTech Project, highlighted by the National Science Foundation as an exemplary Project for boosting recruitment and retention rates of women in technology programs. She has been the Principal Investigator of four NSF Projects, the most recent awarded in June 2011 to build on the successful work of the CalWomenTech Project. |
~ Renee Fall, Project Manager, Commonwealth Alliance for Information Technology Education (CAITE), University of Massachusetts Amherst |

See below for eligibility.
WomenTech Educators Online Training Application: Due by February 15, 2012
Who is eligible?
Administrators, teachers, professors, instructors, counseling and outreach and recruitment staff 1) that are ATE grantees or 2) nominated by the American Association of Community Colleges or the League for Innovation in the Community College. The Online Training will be capped at 25 participants, REGISTER NOW!
Cost:
This training and system are FREE to eligible participants, as part of the National Science Foundation-funded CalWomenTech Scale Up Project. This training with six Support and Strategy sessions and access to the exclusive online forum normally costs participants more than $900, per person.
Benefits:
What is the #1 benefit to participating? More female students in your classes! Here are some additional benefits to you for participating in the WomenTech Educators Online Training:
- Certificate of completion. At the end of the implementation period, you will receive a certificate which can be referenced in your future grant proposals.
- IWITTS has included past training recipients who have successfully increased the number of women in their classes in national conference presentations.
- Your achievements in increasing the number of women in your classes will be highlighted by IWITTS as case studies to inspire other educators and for your own future use.
What's expected of you:
- Take part in the 10-week WomenTech Educators Online Training, starting on February 27.
- Actively participate in the six monthly follow up Support and Strategy sessions, and attend as many live sessions as possible.
- Post your successes and challenges in the online community, and respond to the posts of others.
- Participate in evaluation-related activities.
How to apply:
- Fill out the online application at: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/S3YLX7W
- Have your dean sign a letter of commitment. Click here to download the letter (PDF).
- Return the signed letter from your dean by fax (510-749-0500) or email to seminars[at]iwitts.org by February 15, 2012.
- Space is limited. Don't wait, apply today.
More information:
For additional information about the More Female Students in Just One Year Training and System, contact IWITTS at (510) 749-0200 or at seminars[at]iwitts.org.
After attending the workshop with IWITTS, I was committed to making sure that didn't happen again. At this year's Open House, the College of Sciences held a special Women in Technology event in partnership with the College of Engineering. The girls who came had a great experience, they learned a lot, and I'm confident it strengthened their resolve to pursue careers in science and engineering. Our goal is to have enough female students in science and engineering majors so that the process can become self-reinforcing." ~ Fred Martin, Associate Dean, College of Sciences, University of Massachusetts Lowell |

See below for eligibility.
Space in the WomenTech Educators Online Training is limited. Don't miss out -- apply now.
Just click the Apply Now button, and you'll receive all of the proven recruitment and retention strategies that will help your school increase the number of women and girls in your STEM classrooms in just one year.
Join me, and you'll learn how to see more female faces in your technology classrooms, starting next semester.
I'll see you there!
Donna
WomenTech Educators Online Training and Support
A Proven System for Increasing the Number of Women and Girls in Your Science, Technology & Engineering Classes |
Attention: This online training is for administrators, teachers, professors, instructors, counseling staff, and outreach and recruitment staff connected to any ATE project or center. Download our brochure (PDF) to share with others in your institution.
How Many Women Are in Your Science and Technology Classrooms?
Not enough?
Get more women in the picture!
Increase the number of women in your Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) classrooms with the strategies you’ll learn through the WomenTech Educators Online Training. Based on proven practices, the workshop training curriculum includes the “best-of-the-best” of our strategies, culled from our four National Science Foundation projects and over 17 years of success in assisting educational institutions in recruiting and retaining female students in programs around the country. Our CalWomenTech Project was highlighted by the National Science Foundation for demonstrating significant achievement and program effectiveness.
ONLINE TRAINING STARTS FEBRUARY 27, 2012
Space is limited. Application deadline: February 8, 2012.
Download Application Now (PDF)
Does the WomenTech Educators Training Work? Yes!
Schools that have implemented the strategies you'll learn through this system have seen remarkable results. At San Francisco City College's Computer Networking and Information Technology program, female enrollment has risen from 18% to 33%. Initially, less than 65% of the female students completed the computer program. Using the IWITTS system, they turned around those results so now more than 85% of female students complete their classes.
Read on as I share how I helped schools nearly double their enrollment of female students and dramatically increase retention of both their female and male students. I'll show you how your school can do this, step-by-step, with practical strategies you can put into action right away.
From: Donna Milgram, Executive Director
San Francisco Bay Area
Which way to turn? (Donna's story)
It's Donna here. I know it's frustrating when you've made efforts to get more women and girls into your science and technology classes, and you're stuck because you don't actually see increases in enrollment and disappointment sets in. Your passion for increasing the number of women and girls in STEM starts to fade.
I know because I've worked with educators to whom this has happened. They have a strong commitment, perhaps they have given a workshop or some kind of career activity, and they haven't seen the kinds of results they are looking for.
One educator asked me in frustration, "Where do I start the recruiting process? How can I make our programs more attractive to females? Do I need to alter my teaching style, my explanations of the subject matter, my labs to help female students be more successful?"
I understand this kind of frustration, especially if the advice you've been given is very general or long-term. You're a really committed educator, and you want your female students to be as inspired by STEM as your male students. So I was yearning to provide educators with the direction they need.
That’s why I developed the WomenTech Educators Online Training.
~Pierre Thiry, Principal Investigator, Mid-Pacific ICT Regional Center, San Francisco, CA |



connected with any ATE project or center.
In the WomenTech Educators Online Training, you will learn:
- The #1 secret to increasing the number of women in your classes
- The top three recruitment strategies -- according to the women themselves
- Why changing your thinking isn't enough, and what you can do about it
- The critical thing women want to hear up front that will keep them engaged throughout your course
- 3 simple techniques you can implement tomorrow so your female students will excel in the lab
Download our brochure (PDF) to share with others in your institution.
Who should attend:
Educators connected to any ATE center or project: Science, technology, engineering, and trades instructors; administrators; counselors; outreach and recruitment staff; learning center staff; YOU!
Here are just some of our past ATE clients:
- Consortium for Alabama Regional Center for Automotive Manufacturing
- Midwest Center for Information Technology, AIM Institute, Omaha, NE
- South Carolina Advanced Technological Education National Resource Center for Engineering Technology Education, Florence-Darlington Technical College, Florence, SC
- Convergence Technology Center, Frisco, TX
- Technology and Innovation in Manufacturing Education Center, Baltimore, MD
- Nevada Information Technology Education, Community College of Southern Nevada
- Center for the Advancement of Process Technology, Mainland College, Texas City, TX
- Diversity in Engineering Technology, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Doing it piecemeal: It just doesn't work
We have found that schools that implement one, two or even three gender equity tactics don’t see an increase in enrollment. Doing it piecemeal doesn’t work. That’s why we’ve developed our WomenTech Educators Online Training with Support. The full system is contained in the multi-week online training and the six Support and Strategy sessions. It’s the full system that enables you to get the kind of results that you see above. When you work with IWITTS, you’ll see how well the full system can work for your school.
WomenTech Educators Online Training Content
At this WomenTech Educators Online training, you learn proven recruitment and retention strategies so you can see more female students succeed in your STEM classes. This is a multi-week online training. The training is asynchronous, with live support.
You will take away:
- An easy-to-implement recruitment plan that will greatly increase the number of women and girls in your STEM classrooms.
- A retention plan for your school that will increase the completion rate of your female (and male students), starting this semester.
- The knowledge and confidence you need to put these plans into action, right away.
Training agenda includes:
Discover our proven, road-tested system for increasing the number of women and girls in your STEM classes, which was highlighted by the National Science Foundation.
- Explore gender-specific learning styles: Find out how to excite and engage female students in technology by teaching to their learning style and help female students be successful in the lab.
- Discover your number one strategy that will help boost your female enrollment (that costs little or nothing and doesn’t take a lot of time to implement). Learn how to set up your students for success from Day One in your program so they can have a successful start and the confidence that comes with it.
- Learn how to overcome the challenges of engaging and retaining female students when their numbers in classes are still small.
- Develop a customized action plan for increasing the number of female students in your school and making sure they stay.
- And so much more!
Come to the training in a team:
The more people that you can get involved in this campaign, the more lasting change you're going to have. Yes, one teacher on their own can get more women in the classroom, but the schools that have been the most effective and had lasting institutional change have had more people involved. Together, you and your team members will work together to develop an action plan and provide support to each other as you implement it.
Download our brochure (PDF) to share with others in your institution.
~ Peter Woodberry, PhD, Dean of Business, Science and Technology at Community College of Rhode Island |

connected with any ATE project or center.
After the WomenTech Educators Online Training:
Long-term support for implementation
Keep training participants and your educational institution as a whole focused on your goal of increasing the number of women in STEM. You and your colleagues have many competing priorities for your time. With this ongoing support, you’ll receive help as you work as a team to implement the recruitment and retention plans that you develop in the training. In our successful CalWomenTech Project, the external evaluators found that along with the training, support for implementation was one of the top two most important things that helped schools achieve their impressive recruitment and retention results.
You will receive:
➤ Six Group Support and Strategy Sessions
You’ll have direct access to your trainer on live group sessions to get answers on your specific questions about increasing the number of women in your programs. Your trainer will help your team brainstorm, strategize and troubleshoot, and keep you focused on implementation. Schools that have received this type of long term support have found that it was extremely effective in moving them from plan to action, and ultimately helping them see significant gains in the number of women in their classrooms. In addition, Support and Strategy sessions are an opportunity to receive the latest information you need to get more women into your classrooms. Examples of topics include: how to keep female students from dropping out in the first week; how colleges can recruit from high schools for female students in the STEM classroom; and learn the importance of spatial reasoning skills for retaining your female and male students. |
➤ Exclusive Online Community Forum:
All of the educators who attend the online training will be granted access to a private members-only website. Be a member of our community whose culture is one of positive change around increasing the number of women in STEM. The culture of our online community is, “We can do it!” |
➤ Downloads of all Support and Strategy Sessions
Downloads of Support and Strategy sessions will be emailed to participants and promptly posted to your members-only website. In this way, all of the online training participants can listen at anytime, even if they cannot make the live session. Files are typically posted within 24 hours. |
~ Jessica J. du Maine, Assistant Professor/Program Coordinator, Electrical/ Electronic Engineering & Technology, St. Louis Community College, St. Louis, MO |

connected with any ATE project or center.
About Donna Milgram, Your WomenTech Educators Trainer:
![]() |
Donna Milgram, the Executive Director of the National Institute for Women in Trades, Technology and Science (IWITTS), has conducted national and state trainings and workshops in 43 states. She is the Principal Investigator of the CalWomenTech Project, highlighted by the National Science Foundation as an exemplary Project for boosting recruitment and retention rates of women in technology programs. She has been the Principal Investigator of four NSF Projects, the most recent awarded in June 2011 to build on the successful work of the CalWomenTech Project. |
~ Renee Fall, Project Manager, Commonwealth Alliance for Information Technology Education (CAITE), University of Massachusetts Amherst |

connected with any ATE project or center.
WomenTech Educators Online Training Application: Due by February 8, 2012
Who is eligible?
Administrators, teachers, professors, instructors, counseling staff, and outreach and recruitment staff connected to any ATE project or center may apply to participate in the WomenTech Educators Online Training.
Cost:
This training and system are FREE to eligible participants, as part of the National Science Foundation-funded CalWomenTech Scale Up Project. This training with six Support and Strategy sessions and access to the exclusive online forum normally costs participants more than $900, per person.
Benefits:
What is the #1 benefit to participating? More female students in your classes! Here are some additional benefits to you for participating in the WomenTech Educators Online Training:
- Certificate of completion. At the end of the implementation period, you will receive a certificate which can be referenced in your future grant proposals.
- IWITTS has included past training recipients who have successfully increased the number of women in their classes in national conference presentations.
- Your achievements in increasing the number of women in your classes will be highlighted by IWITTS as case studies to inspire other educators and for your own future use.
What’s expected of you:
- Take part in the multi-week WomenTech Educators Online Training, starting on February 27.
- Actively participate in the six follow up Support and Strategy sessions, and attend as many live sessions as possible.
- Post your successes and challenges in the online community, and respond to the posts of others.
- Participate in the ATE EvaluATE annual survey.
How to apply:
- Fill out and sign this application form .
- Have your dean sign the form where indicated.
- Return the signed form by fax, mail, or email by February 8, 2012 to:
- IWITTS: Online Training
1150 Ballena Bay, Suite 102
Alameda, CA 94501
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.; Phone: (510) 749-0200; Fax: (510) 749-0500 - Space is limited to 25 attendees. Seats will be reserved on a first come-first served basis. Don’t wait, apply today.
More information:
For additional information about the More Female Students in Just One Year Training and System, contact IWITTS with the above contact information.
After attending the workshop with IWITTS, I was committed to making sure that didn’t happen again. At this year’s Open House, the College of Sciences held a special Women in Technology event in partnership with the College of Engineering. The girls who came had a great experience, they learned a lot, and I’m confident that it strengthened their resolve to pursue careers in science and engineering. Our goal is to have enough female students in science and engineering majors so that the process can become self-reinforcing " ~ Fred Martin, Associate Dean, College of Sciences, University of Massachusetts Lowell |

connected with any ATE project or center.
Space in the WomenTech Educators Online Training is limited. Don't miss out -- apply now.
Just click the Apply Now button, and you'll receive all of the proven recruitment and retention strategies that will help your school increase the number of women and girls in your STEM classrooms in just one year.
Join me, and you'll learn how to see more female faces in your technology classrooms, starting next semester.
I'll see you there!
Donna
WomenTech Educators Online Training and Support
A Proven System for Increasing the Number of Women and Girls in Your Science, Technology & Engineering Classes |
Attention: This online training is for administrators, teachers, professors, instructors, counseling staff, and outreach and recruitment staff connected to any ATE project or center.
How Many Women Are in Your Science and Technology Classrooms?
Not enough?
Get more women in the picture!
Increase the number of women in your Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) classrooms with the strategies you’ll learn through the WomenTech Educators Online Training. Based on proven practices, the workshop training curriculum includes the “best-of-the-best” of our strategies, culled from our four National Science Foundation projects and over 17 years of success in assisting educational institutions in recruiting and retaining female students in programs around the country. Our CalWomenTech Project was highlighted by the National Science Foundation for demonstrating significant achievement and program effectiveness.
ONLINE TRAINING STARTS FEBRUARY 27, 2012
Space is limited. Application deadline: February 15, 2012.
Complete the Online Application Now
Does the WomenTech Educators Training Work? Yes!
Schools that have implemented the strategies you'll learn through this system have seen remarkable results. At San Francisco City College's Computer Networking and Information Technology program, female enrollment has risen from 18% to 33%. Initially, less than 65% of the female students completed the computer program. Using the IWITTS system, they turned around those results so now more than 85% of female students complete their classes.
Read on as I share how I helped schools nearly double their enrollment of female students and dramatically increase retention of both their female and male students. I'll show you how your school can do this, step-by-step, with practical strategies you can put into action right away.
From: Donna Milgram, Executive Director
Which way to turn? (Donna's story)
It's Donna here. I know it's frustrating when you've made efforts to get more women and girls into your science and technology classes, and you're stuck because you don't actually see increases in enrollment and disappointment sets in. Your passion for increasing the number of women and girls in STEM starts to fade.
I know because I've worked with educators to whom this has happened. They have a strong commitment, perhaps they have given a workshop or some kind of career activity, and they haven't seen the kinds of results they are looking for.
One educator asked me in frustration, "Where do I start the recruiting process? How can I make our programs more attractive to females? Do I need to alter my teaching style, my explanations of the subject matter, my labs to help female students be more successful?"
I understand this kind of frustration, especially if the advice you've been given is very general or long-term. You're a really committed educator, and you want your female students to be as inspired by STEM as your male students. So I was yearning to provide educators with the direction they need.
That’s why I developed the WomenTech Educators Online Training.
~Pierre Thiry, Principal Investigator, Mid-Pacific ICT Regional Center, San Francisco, CA |



See below for eligibility.
In the WomenTech Educators Online Training, you will learn:
- The #1 secret to increasing the number of women in your classes
- The top three recruitment strategies -- according to the women themselves
- Why changing your thinking isn't enough, and what you can do about it
- The critical thing women want to hear up front that will keep them engaged throughout your course
- 3 simple techniques you can implement tomorrow so your female students will excel in the lab
Who should attend:
Administrators, teachers, professors, instructors, counseling and outreach and recruitment staff 1) that are ATE grantees or 2) nominated by the American Association of Community Colleges or the League for Innovation in the Community College. The Online Training will be capped at 25 participants.
Here are just some of our past ATE clients:
- Consortium for Alabama Regional Center for Automotive Manufacturing
- Midwest Center for Information Technology, AIM Institute, Omaha, NE
- South Carolina Advanced Technological Education National Resource Center for Engineering Technology Education, Florence-Darlington Technical College, Florence, SC
- Convergence Technology Center, Frisco, TX
- Technology and Innovation in Manufacturing Education Center, Baltimore, MD
- Nevada Information Technology Education, Community College of Southern Nevada
- Center for the Advancement of Process Technology, Mainland College, Texas City, TX
- Diversity in Engineering Technology, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Doing it piecemeal: It just doesn't work
We have found that schools that implement one, two or even three gender equity tactics don’t see an increase in enrollment. Doing it piecemeal doesn’t work. That’s why we’ve developed our WomenTech Educators Online Training with Support. The full system is contained in the multi-week online training and the six Support and Strategy sessions. It’s the full system that enables you to get the kind of results that you see above. When you work with IWITTS, you’ll see how well the full system can work for your school.
WomenTech Educators Online Training Content
You will take away (learning outcomes):
- An easy-to-implement recruitment plan that will greatly increase the number of women and girls in your STEM classrooms.
- A retention plan for your school that will increase the completion rate of your female (and male students), starting this semester.
- The knowledge and confidence you need to put these plans into action, right away.
Training agenda and learning objectives include:
Discover our proven, road-tested system for increasing the number of women and girls in your STEM classes, which was highlighted by the National Science Foundation.
- Explore gender-specific learning styles: Find out how to excite and engage female students in technology by teaching to their learning style and help female students be successful in the lab.
- Discover your number one strategy that will help boost your female enrollment (that costs little or nothing and doesn’t take a lot of time to implement). Learn how to set up your students for success from Day One in your program so they can have a successful start and the confidence that comes with it.
- Learn how to overcome the challenges of engaging and retaining female students when their numbers in classes are still small.
- Develop a customized action plan for increasing the number of female students in your school and making sure they stay.
- And so much more!
Come to the training in a team:
The more people that you can get involved in this campaign, the more lasting change you're going to have. Yes, one teacher on their own can get more women in the classroom, but the schools that have been the most effective and had lasting institutional change have had more people involved. Together, you and your team members will work together to develop an action plan and provide support to each other as you implement it.
~ Peter Woodberry, PhD, Dean of Business, Science and Technology at Community College of Rhode Island |

See below for eligibility.
After the WomenTech Educators Online Training:
Long-term support for implementation
Keep training participants and your educational institution as a whole focused on your goal of increasing the number of women in STEM. You and your colleagues have many competing priorities for your time. With this ongoing support, you’ll receive help as you work as a team to implement the recruitment and retention plans that you develop in the training. In our successful CalWomenTech Project, the external evaluators found that along with the training, support for implementation was one of the top two most important things that helped schools achieve their impressive recruitment and retention results.
You will receive:
➤ Six Group Support and Strategy Sessions
You’ll have direct access to your trainer, Donna Milgram, on live group sessions to get answers on your specific questions about increasing the number of women in your programs. Donna will help you brainstorm, strategize and troubleshoot, and keep you focused on implementation. Schools that have received this type of long term support have found that it was extremely effective in moving them from plan to action, and ultimately helping them see significant gains in the number of women in their classrooms. |
➤ Exclusive Online Community Forum:
All of the educators who attend the online training will be granted access to a private members-only website. Be a member of our community whose culture is one of positive change around increasing the number of women in STEM. The culture of our online community is, “We can do it!” |
➤ Downloads of all Support and Strategy Sessions
Downloads of Support and Strategy sessions will be emailed to participants and promptly posted to your members-only website. In this way, all of the online training participants can listen at anytime, even if they cannot make the live session. Files are typically posted within 24 hours. |
~ Jessica J. du Maine, Assistant Professor/Program Coordinator, Electrical/ Electronic Engineering & Technology, St. Louis Community College, St. Louis, MO |

See below for eligibility.
About Donna Milgram, Your WomenTech Educators Trainer:
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Donna Milgram, the Executive Director of the National Institute for Women in Trades, Technology and Science (IWITTS), has conducted national and state trainings and workshops in 43 states. She is the Principal Investigator of the CalWomenTech Project, highlighted by the National Science Foundation as an exemplary Project for boosting recruitment and retention rates of women in technology programs. She has been the Principal Investigator of four NSF Projects, the most recent awarded in June 2011 to build on the successful work of the CalWomenTech Project. |
~ Renee Fall, Project Manager, Commonwealth Alliance for Information Technology Education (CAITE), University of Massachusetts Amherst |

See below for eligibility.
WomenTech Educators Online Training Application: Due by February 8, 2012
Who is eligible?
Administrators, teachers, professors, instructors, counseling and outreach and recruitment staff 1) that are ATE grantees or 2) nominated by the American Association of Community Colleges or the League for Innovation in the Community College. The Online Training will be capped at 25 participants, REGISTER NOW!
Cost:
This training and system are FREE to eligible participants, as part of the National Science Foundation-funded CalWomenTech Scale Up Project. This training with six Support and Strategy sessions and access to the exclusive online forum normally costs participants more than $900, per person.
Benefits:
What is the #1 benefit to participating? More female students in your classes! Here are some additional benefits to you for participating in the WomenTech Educators Online Training:
- Certificate of completion. At the end of the implementation period, you will receive a certificate which can be referenced in your future grant proposals.
- IWITTS has included past training recipients who have successfully increased the number of women in their classes in national conference presentations.
- Your achievements in increasing the number of women in your classes will be highlighted by IWITTS as case studies to inspire other educators and for your own future use.
What’s expected of you:
- Take part in the 10-week WomenTech Educators Online Training, starting on February 27.
- Actively participate in the six monthly follow up Support and Strategy sessions, and attend as many live sessions as possible.
- Post your successes and challenges in the online community, and respond to the posts of others.
- Participate in evaluation-related activities.
How to apply:
- Fill out the online application at:
- Have your dean sign a letter of commitment. Click here to download the letter (PDF):
- Return the signed letter from your dean by fax (510-749-0500) or email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. by February 15, 2012.
- Space is limited. Don't wait, apply today.
More information:
For additional information about the More Female Students in Just One Year Training and System, contact IWITTS at (510) 749-0200 or at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
After attending the workshop with IWITTS, I was committed to making sure that didn’t happen again. At this year’s Open House, the College of Sciences held a special Women in Technology event in partnership with the College of Engineering. The girls who came had a great experience, they learned a lot, and I’m confident that it strengthened their resolve to pursue careers in science and engineering. Our goal is to have enough female students in science and engineering majors so that the process can become self-reinforcing " ~ Fred Martin, Associate Dean, College of Sciences, University of Massachusetts Lowell |

See below for eligibility.
Space in the WomenTech Educators Online Training is limited. Don't miss out -- apply now.
Just click the Apply Now button, and you'll receive all of the proven recruitment and retention strategies that will help your school increase the number of women and girls in your STEM classrooms in just one year.
Join me, and you'll learn how to see more female faces in your technology classrooms, starting next semester.
I'll see you there!
Donna
Posters Send a Welcoming Message to Female Students in STEM.
Posters of individual career pathways are available in quantities of 50 or 100. Contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for more info and a quote on select pathways.
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See all six posters in the set:
Customize the posters for your programs to attract even more students!
Add your school's program contact information and logo to each poster. Add your contact details, information about your program, and your school's logo to each poster. |
Note: 1 set = 6 posters
Posters create a buzz on campus: A note from Donna
Hi, I'm Donna Milgram, the Executive Director of IWITTS.
Why is it important to have these women in STEM posters on your campus? You are going to find that they will not only help your school with recruiting women and girls, they will also help raise awareness and create a cultural change on your campus.
A Dean that I have worked with at two colleges told me that the posters started a conversation about women working in these fields that was positive. In automotive technology at the first college, and across multiple career pathways at his new college, students talked about how "cool" it was for women to work in these fields. The buzz on campus spread to faculty, who became more enthusiastic about their school's "Women's Initiative," a campaign to increase female students in predominantly male courses. "Now," he told me, "even male faculty are asking me, 'When is our next Women's Initiative team meeting?'"
We cannot underestimate the importance of images in bringing about change. And when you have these posters up around your campus and in your community it sends a welcoming message from your school.
By hanging these posters in your hallways, classrooms and around campus, you'll help imprint images of female role models in the minds of your female (and male) students. These images send a positive counteracting message and help women picture themselves in these occupations.
Don't let any more potential students miss out on high-paying, rewarding careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM). Women bring a different perspective to the classroom and the workplace. It's up to you to help students picture themselves in these careers!
I know you'll find these posters to be a valuable tool in your tool belt as you work towards increasing the number of female students in your classes!
Best regards,
Donna
P.S. Don't forget, you can customize these posters for your programs! Add your program contact information and school logo, and attract even more students. It's as easy as printing out a mailing label.
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Help your female (and male!) students identify critical tools so they'll be more confident and successful in your trades classes. |
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See a clip from the Auto Technician's Toolbox video that gives your students an introduction to tools used for steering and suspension systems.
For many female (and male) students entering technical classes, their first challenge is tool identification. Women tend to have less informal tool-use experience outside of the classroom and may find it difficult to identify tools when they enter the trades. Many male students also don't have these skills when they first enroll in trades programs. Demonstrating tool-use in the classroom is a great way to keep your students engaged!
This six-part video series opens the trades "toolbox" and introduces your students to basic trade-specific equipment used in a variety of occupations, including plumber, carpenter, mason, welder, electrician and automotive technician.
Each of the six "Tools of the Trade: Inside the Technician's Toolbox" videos demonstrate to students exactly how each tool is used, and explains why each tool is used in real-world settings. The videos also offer a bigger picture of the industry itself, including an inside look at career options.
Order individual videos, or order the full set.
About the videos:
Each DVD is 19-32 minutes long and comes with a downloadable instructor's guide featuring educational standards, vocabulary, discussion questions and project ideas for your students. The Tools of the Trade DVD Series correlates to all National Career and Technical Education (CTE) Organizational Standards (including the provisions of the Perkins Act).
See the videos: |
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Inside the Auto Technician's Toolbox
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Inside the Carpenter's Toolbox
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Inside the Electrician's Toolbox
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Inside the Mason's Toolbox
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Inside the Plumber's Toolbox
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Inside the Welder's Toolbox
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Please note:
The video narrator and demonstrators are all male. These are not role model videos, but will help your students develop the basic introductory skills they need to succeed in the trades occupations above.