News
[Broadband]| Friday 9th March 2007 |
The telco has announced plans, which coincided with International Women's Day, to increase the number of women in engineering roles with an apprentice attraction campaign touting the benefits of being an engineer - a job they say is 'not just for blokes'.
'BT is committed to improving the percentage of female apprentices,' said Dave Walsh, head of BT Apprenticeships. 'We have a target
ADVERTISEMENT |
|
A highly competitive program, 6,000 people already apply for the 600 apprenticeship roles on offer, most of which are with local network business Openreach.
As we reported today, according to European Commission statistics, the number of women graduating from computer programs in the European Union declined from 25 per cent in 1998 to 22 per cent in 2006. And, two-thirds of telecommunications companies have no women on their boards of directors.
A study last year said that women held just 16 per cent of jobs in the IT sector, suggesting government and employers were failing in their bid to balance the workforce.
Submit to: Digg | Slashdot | Del.icio.us | Technorati
Cordless, caller display, 100 hours standby time, 50 m indoor range, 300 m outdoor range, caller display, telephone book
BT Freestyle 750 Triple
Cordless, caller display, answering machine, 100 hours standby time, 50 m indoor range, 300 m outdoor range, caller display, telephone book, answering machine
BT Verve 450
Cordless, caller display, answering machine, caller display, telephone book, answering machine
BT Studio 1500
Cordless, caller display, answering machine, 100 hours standby time, 50 m indoor range, 300 m outdoor range, caller display, answering machine






