Noting that science does not preach or teach prejudice, she said science for every day women was something that should be encouraged.
"A very famous physicist had once said that science can enrich plutonium but cannot enrich the hearts of men. I find that to be very honestly true to this day. For if science couldn't enrich the hearts of men, we would not need a separate Women's Science Congress," Irani said.
Stating that prejudice against women scientists "dramatically exists", she said, "That is a scientific anomaly."
Noting that no school-going child in the country today would be able to name an Indian female scientist, she said "...That is the prejudice that we need to address at the school level."
"As we look to address the challenges that female scientists face, first and foremost, we need to engage with our children at the school level and tell them the remarkable contribution made by female scientists of Indian origin. That is the challenge that I hope to address at the earliest."
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Asking the Women's Science Congress to give government a pathway to make it easier for women to pursue PhD any time anywhere, Irani said when this challenge is fundamentally addressed, "we will see more and more women in science. That is where the real change lies".
Recollecting her visit to the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre before becoming a Minister where women comprised 75 per cent of administrative staff and 25 per cent scientific staff, Irani said we can "reverse" that by mentoring more and more girls in higher education institutions who want to be part of scientific journey that India has undertaken.
She said the HRD Ministry had undertaken two programmes - Rashtriya Avishkar Abhiyan and Unnat Bharat Abhiyan - for encouraging school students to be handled by institutions of higher learning so that they go beyond text books and innovate, and for adopting five villages around every educational institution to enhance the living condition of their residents by transfer of latest scientific discovery and technology.
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