All of the American astronauts who'll be aboard the ISS by the end of March are from NASA's 2013 class, the first where women represented 50 percent of the team (2017's class was 42 percent women). Simply speaking, you're statistically more likely to see women suiting up than you were even a decade ago -- it was just a matter of when a team's composition would skew female.

You might not see similar spacewalks from other countries in the near future. Russia's 2018 class is all-male, for example. It's a start, though, and it won't be surprising if the March 29th mission heralds more varied spacewalks for a long time to come.