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Help inform our next campaign

Hi everyone!

Hope you're safe and well.

We champion equality, diversity and inclusion here at the IET - and frequently run campaigns to challenge outdated stereotypes and make our profession a more welcoming and inclusive place.

We're starting work on our next campaign - and we need your help!

Our focus for this phase is on how we can take real, tangible steps to unite our community to make engineering and technology a career path that is accessible to everyone.

So, what’s your experience? Tell us by adding your thoughts below.

We want to hear from everyone, and we mean everyone. We believe that continuing to thrive in this sector can only happen if we all connect and work together, and that means we need all viewpoints – positive, negative, and even the grey area in between!

So whether you have had good or bad experiences, whatever your background, and whether you identify with different protected characteristics or not – we want to hear from you.

And if you’re comfortable sharing your thoughts in a little more detail, we’re looking for a broad mix of individuals to be interviewed in the next few weeks. You can submit your details for consideration via this link.

And if you would prefer to remain anonymous but still have a viewpoint you’d like to share – no problem! You can send us your thoughts using this form instead.

Thank you in advance for your support.

Parents
  • I think that discrimination is embedded in western culture. For an example, my mother was born to a member of the British Army in a British Army Hospital. However she was classed as alien and had to keep massive records of why she was British because her father was from Ireland and the hospital was in Malta.

    I detest the characterisation of sub-cultures even though we are using metaphors to name them, e.g. White and Black. All people are important. I call myself Northern European when I have to.

    And then we use terms like Man to mean something? Well as a man I detest sport, avoiding playing it as a child and rarely watching it since - only really the Tour de France. Also school did an excellent job of turning me off poetry and I don't like songs either.

Reply
  • I think that discrimination is embedded in western culture. For an example, my mother was born to a member of the British Army in a British Army Hospital. However she was classed as alien and had to keep massive records of why she was British because her father was from Ireland and the hospital was in Malta.

    I detest the characterisation of sub-cultures even though we are using metaphors to name them, e.g. White and Black. All people are important. I call myself Northern European when I have to.

    And then we use terms like Man to mean something? Well as a man I detest sport, avoiding playing it as a child and rarely watching it since - only really the Tour de France. Also school did an excellent job of turning me off poetry and I don't like songs either.

Children
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