Of the 61 respondents who ID as female:
89% have a degree, 11% do not.
Compared to the 359 who ID as male:
72% have a degree, 28% do not.
Age/degree breakdowns:
Under 26, 21 respondents, 43% no degree, 57% degree
26-35, 92 respondents, 24/76% no/yes degree
36-45, 168 respondents, 27/73% no/yes degree
46-55, 121 respondents, 26/74% no/yes degree
56 and up, 34 respondents, 24/76% no/yes degree
Age/gender ID breakdown:
Under 26, 21/79% ID as female/male
26-35, 22/78% female/male
36-45, 14/86% female/male
46/55, 9/91% female/male
56 and up, 15/85% female/male
Of 437 respondents, 6 ID as non-binary (~1%) and 9 preferred not to answer (2%)
All demographic data was clearly marked as being optional.
I'll let you decide what (if any) of the revelations above warrant a "that's interesting".
Up next, more-or-less cleaned up raw data files in .csv and .xlsx formats.