Fiona Erskine

Engineer. Writer. Swimmer.

#SmashStereotypesToBitsCapture

In a recent campaign to encourage careers in engineering, a group of female engineers stage an epic pillow fight involving catapults, explosions and drones.

I watched the IET video and found myself conflicted.

The young women in the video are beautiful as well as ingenious. Close-ups of lipstick, nail polish and perfectly coiffed hair reinforce the message  that you can be a girly girl and still be an engineer; you don’t have to be a tomboy to get a kick out of practical problem solving.

And it’s an important message. After disastrous exam results in my first year at university, my tutor explained that there were two types of women: those good at maths and those who were feminine. He suggested I change course to something more suitable. Such nonsense may have been well intentioned, but as reverse psychology it worked brilliantly. I gritted my teeth and scraped through the engineering course I started.

Portraithttps://faraday-secondary.theiet.org/careers/portrait-of-an-engineer/

Beyond university, engineering is one of the most meritocratic professions I can think of. It isn’t about how you look, but about how you think. Success is rarely down to star individuals; is all about high-performing teams. Communication, creativity, lateral thinking, puzzle solving, and planning become crucially important. The joy of a career in engineering is the constant mental stimulation. And the satisfaction of creating beautiful, elegant, life-enhancing products.

So why am I conflicted?

The IET video has a Top Gear feel, a testosterone-fuelled take on destruction. While applauding anything that encourages diversity, I find myself wondering whether the video replaces one stereotype (engineering is not for women) with another (how a woman looks is more important than what she does).

Compare the IET video with the recent UK army recruitment video “This is belonging”.

In 1979, I went to university to study chemical engineering, motivated by scientific parents, a great comprehensive school and television programs like Tomorrow’s World. It seemed to me that while many people were able point out was wrong with the world, there were fewer people with the skills to help put it right. I have travelled the world and had a fantastically rewarding career.

But the ratio of women in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths) careers remains low in the UK. Why do so few women pursue careers in engineering? Why aren’t there more female coders? I would argue that the biggest influence is an education system that forces children to choose between arts and science far too early. When I went to school in Scotland, I was able to combine arts and science, studying Maths, Physics and Chemistry, but also History, English, French and Russian at Higher Grade. If I had been forced to choose, I would probably have studied languages. Which is why I am heartened by the STEAM initiative in which creative arts become integral to teaching numerate disciplines: creativity in action.

In the end my objections to the IET video could be boiled down to one scene where a woman drives her motorbike without a helmet. Beauty over safety?

And then I found this photo, taken while commissioning a recycling plant in Portugal;  I must have taken off my goggles and hard hat for the camera.

Fiona 1993

Commissioning

Let’s face it, I am not the target audience for the IET video. I am from a generation which still faced legal discrimination but believed that if women in Europe were given equal opportunity then hard work and graft could overcome anything. I still believe that, and I suspect that many women already in the profession will find the IET video irritatingly playful and lacking in constructive substance.

But I must temper my grumpiness. On balance, if this high octane short video appeals to young people, alerts them to the variety of careers in engineering, if it leads you to find out more about the possibilities, then bravo – I support you.

Let’s keep talking.

Fiona Erskine’s debut thriller “The Chemical Detective” is published by the Oneworld imprint, Point Blank Books, available in all good bookshops and online here.

 


Sunny southern sojourn with friends and family and a stonkingly good book. London looking stunning!


In Houston for the day job, I went back to visit my old house and primary school from when my dad had a sabbatical at Rice University. Fleming park is much smaller than I remember but the fire ants are still there! Highlight was a full Tex-Mex with Theresa and Bhopal expert Kenneth Bloch - plans afoot for a new book.


I swam 24km in 5 days. Hard work?

Try tuna canning, salt drying or sulphur mining...

https://fionaerskine.substack.com/p/sulphur-and-salt


Goodbye #egadiislands and thank you @swimtrek for an amazing week - 24 kilometres with wonderful guides, fellow swimmers and multicoloured fishes!


This week #PhosphateRocks e-book is only £0.99 in UK

Who doesn't love a story about a demolition gone wrong? @raine_clouds_writes @lesleykellyauthor 

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Phosphate-Rocks-Death-Ten-Objects-ebook/dp/B0CTRRXKNY

PS: The audio book narrated by @rain.goblin is pretty special too


A quarter of my sales this month were overseas for the very first time!

Massive thanks to all those fine Canadians for topping the list. Say Hi if you see this.

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Top cinema visit #1 was the glorious #HAMNET - a reminder of just how good a movie can be

Movie #2 of #3 - Astonishing #Marama . New Zealand horror is not for the faint hearted, but even if (like me) you close your eyes, the brilliant sound will fill in the gaps. Unforgettably…

Thoroughly enjoyed #3 of 3 cinema visits #WutheringHeightsMovie - a book I have always loathed. Over analysis does it no favours, I was swept away by the sound and visuals… and it’s laugh-out loud funny in places which leavens the grinding grimness.

The Salt Oracle by Lorraine Wilson
⁦@raine_clouds⁩ https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/8128830782

We're looking forward to being part of Carolyn's tour for 'Ravenglass'! Carolyn will be with us @hull_libraries (Central and online), 11th February 📚

Fantastic to hear @Ofmooseandmen features on @BBCBooks - such a great publisher and @RonanHession1 is one of my favourite authors and a great interviewee. (Ghost Mountain fell in the bath - sorry!)

Saturday 10 January 2026. ⁦@TonyKent_Writes⁩ will be in ⁦@wstonesdurham⁩ FREE event. See you there! #RevengeOfOdessa

I have news!
Stellar thanks to @SFcrowsnest for a stirring introduction - to #TheLye and to #agentjarrold for his immense courage. Watch this space…

Novelist Carolyn Kirby discusses the apparently radical shift in men’s fashions during the late 18th century and the invention of the ‘masculine’ style that still dominates menswear. https://historiamag.com/invent-masculine-fashion/ via @HistoriaHWA

I have news. Exciting news...
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