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UCL MechEng celebrates INWED 2020

23 June 2020

Every International Women in Engineering Day (June 23) UCL Engineering takes the opportunity to showcase and champion our fantastic female students, researchers and academics. This year, Ayushi Agrawal, a PhD student at UCL Mechanical Engineering, participated.

Ayushi Agrawal

National Women in Engineering Day was originally launched in the UK on 23 June 2014 by the Women’s Engineering Society (WES), in order to celebrate its 95th anniversary. Receiving UNESCO patronage in 2016, the initiative became international for the first time in 2017, adopting its now familiar moniker, INWED, and enabling the celebration of women in engineering to become global.

As part of UCL Engineering’s INWED 2020 celebrations, representatives from eight UCL Engineering departments have been interviewed about their experiences studying, and/or working, in their respective disciplines.

Two undergraduates, four research students, one post-doc and one Senior Teaching Fellow have participated in this year’s campaign, discussing everything from what inspired them to get into engineering in the first place, how the current COVID-19 situation has impacted upon their studies or research, and what advice they’d give anyone, especially young women, wanting to get into a STEM-related field.

Professor Vanessa Diaz, UCL Engineering Vice-Dean Equality, Diversity and Inclusion, notes how UCL Engineering “is working on an inclusive EDI Strategy Plan. We have made progress when it comes to gender equality and gender inclusion, but we acknowledge that we still have much to achieve.

Professor Diaz also acknowledges the need for “diversity to tackle so many challenges, as demonstrated in these videos. I’m also particularly mindful of intersectionality and although INWED is a day to celebrate, there is also an opportunity and I would even say, a duty, to reflect on how to better support all women, being very mindful that all careers and experiences are unique but also, that many women engineers have to face multiple disadvantages whilst studying and throughout their careers. I want us to think how we can be inclusive and bring real equity into our profession as it is paramount for our future.”

See what Ayushi Agrawal’s, PhD student at UCL Department of Mechanical Engineering, has to say in the video below:

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See the rest of the interviews here.

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  • Caption: Headshots of UCL Engineering’s INWED 2020 campaign interviewees.