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Women faring well in hiring process for science faculty jobs at research universities

WASHINGTON -- Although women are still underrepresented in the applicant pool for faculty positions in math, science, and engineering at major research universities, those who do apply are interviewed and hired at rates equal to or higher than those for men, says a new report from the National Research Council. Similarly, women are underrepresented among those considered for tenure, but those who are considered receive tenure at the same or higher rates than men.

The congressionally mandated report examines how women at research-intensive universities fare compared with men at key transition points in their careers. Two national surveys were commissioned to help address the issue. The report's conclusions are based on the findings of these surveys of tenure-track and tenured faculty in six disciplines -- biology, chemistry, mathematics, civil engineering, electrical engineering, and physics -- at 89 institutions in 2004 and 2005. The study committee also heard testimony and examined data from federal agencies, professional societies, individual university studies, and academic articles.

In each of the six disciplines, women who applied for tenure-track positions had a better chance of being interviewed and receiving job offers than male applicants had. For example, women made up 20 percent of applicants for positions in mathematics but accounted for 28 percent of those interviewed, and received 32 percent of the job offers. This was also true for tenured positions, with the exception of those in biology.

However, women are not applying for tenure-track jobs at research-intensive universities at the same rate that they are earning Ph.D.s, the report says. The gap is most pronounced in disciplines with larger fractions of women receiving Ph.D.s; for example, while women received 45 percent of the Ph.D.s in biology awarded by research-intensive universities from 1999 to 2003, they accounted for only 26 percent of applicants to tenure-track positions at those schools. Research is needed to investigate why more women are not applying for these jobs, the committee said.

"Our data suggest that, on average, institutions have become more effective in using the means under their direct control to promote faculty diversity, including hiring and promoting women and providing resources," said committee co-chair Claude Canizares, Bruno Rossi Professor of Physics and vice president for research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "Nevertheless, we also find evidence for stubborn and persistent underrepresentation of women at all faculty ranks."

The surveys revealed that most institutional strategies to try to increase the proportion of women in the applicant pool -- such as targeted advertising and recruiting at conferences -- did not show significant effectiveness, the report says. One strategy did appear to make a difference: Having a female chair of the search committee and a high number of women on the committee were associated with a higher number of women in the applicant pool.

The report also assessed gender differences in the following areas:

  • ACCESS TO INSTITUTIONAL RESOURCES: Men and women reported comparable access to many institutional resources, including start-up packages, travel funds, and supervision of similar numbers of postdocs and research assistants. And in general, men and women spent similar proportions of their time on teaching, research, and service. Although at first glance men seemed to have more lab space than women, this difference disappeared when other factors such as discipline and faculty rank were accounted for. However, men appeared to have greater access to equipment needed for research and to clerical support, the report said.

  • TENURE: In every field, women were underrepresented among candidates for tenure relative to the number of female assistant professors. In chemistry, for example, women made up 22 percent of assistant professors, but only 15 percent of the faculty being considered for tenure. Women also spent significantly longer time as assistant professors. However, women who did come up for tenure review were at least as likely as men to receive tenure.
  • SALARY: Women full professors were paid on average 8 percent less than their male counterparts, the report says. This difference in salary did not exist in the ranks of associate and assistant professors.
  • CLIMATE AND INTERACTION WITH COLLEAGUES: Female faculty reported that they were less likely than men to engage in conversation with their colleagues on many professional topics, including research, salary, and benefits. This distance may prevent women from accessing important information and may make them feel less included and more marginalized in their professional lives, the committee observed. While on average institutions have done more to address aspects of career transitions under their control, the report notes, one of the remaining challenges may be in the climate at the departmental level.
  • OUTCOMES: On most key measures -- grant funding, nominations for awards and honors, and offers of positions at other institutions -- there is little evidence of differences in outcomes. In terms of funding for research, male faculty had significantly more funding than female faculty in biology; in other disciplines, the differences were not significant.

The committee urged further research on unanswered questions, such as why more women are not applying for tenure-track positions, why female faculty continue to experience a sense of isolation, and how nonacademic issues affect women's and men's career choices at critical junctures.

"Overall the newly released data indicate important progress, and signal to both young men and especially to young women that what had been the status quo at research-intensive universities is changing," said committee co-chair Sally Shaywitz, Audrey G. Ratner Professor in Learning Development and co-director of the Yale Center for Dyslexia and Creativity, Yale University School of Medicine. "There is a movement toward more gender equity than noted in previous reports or often publicly appreciated. At the same time, the findings show that we are not there yet. The gap between female graduates and the pool of female applicants is very real, and suggests that focus next be placed on examining challenges such as family and child responsibilities, which typically impact women more than men."

The study was sponsored by the National Science Foundation at the request of Congress. The National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine, and National Research Council make up the National Academies. They are private, nonprofit institutions that provide science, technology, and health policy advice under a congressional charter. The Research Council is the principal operating agency of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering. A committee roster follows.

Copies of GENDER DIFFERENCES AT CRITICAL TRANSITIONS IN THE CAREERS OF SCIENCE, ENGINEERING, AND MATHEMATICS FACULTY are available from the National Academies Press; tel. 202-334-3313 or 1-800-624-6242 or on the Internet at HTTP://WWW.NAP.EDU. Reporters may obtain a copy from the Office of News and Public Information (contacts listed above). In addition, a podcast of the public briefing held to release this report is available at HTTP://NATIONAL-ACADEMIES.ORG/PODCAST.

[ This news release and report are available at HTTP://NATIONAL-ACADEMIES.ORG ]

NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL

Division on Policy and Global Affairs
and
Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education

COMMITTEE ON GENDER DIFFERENCES IN CAREERS OF SCIENCE, ENGINEERING, AND MATHEMATICS FACULTY

CLAUDE R. CANIZARES 1 (CO-CHAIR)

Vice President for Research,

Associate Provost, and

Bruno Rossi Professor of Experimental Physics

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Cambridge

SALLY SHAYWITZ 2 (CO-CHAIR)

Audrey G. Ratner Professor in Learning Development, and

Co-Director

Yale Center for Dyslexia and Creativity

Yale University School of Medicine

New Haven, Conn.

LINDA M. ABRIOLA 3

Dean of Engineering, and

Professor

School of Engineering

Tufts University

Medford, Mass.

JANE E. BUIKSTRA 1

Professor of Bioarchaeology, and

Director

Center for Bioarchaeological Research

School of Human Evolution and Social Change

Arizona State University

Tempe

ALICIA CARRIQUIRY

Professor

Department of Statistics

Iowa State University

Ames

RONALD G. EHRENBERG

Irving M. Ives Professor of Industrial and Labor Relations and Economics, and

Director

Cornell Higher Education Research Institute

Cornell University

Ithaca, N.Y.

JOAN GIRGUS

Professor

Department of Psychology, and

Special Assistant to the Dean of the Faculty

Princeton University

Princeton, N.J.

ARLEEN A. LEIBOWITZ

Professor of Public Policy

School of Public Affairs

University of California

Los Angeles

THOMAS N. TAYLOR 1

Roy A. Roberts Distinguished Professor

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, and

Senior Curator

Natural History Museum and Biodiversity Research Center

University of Kansas

Lawrence

LILIAN SHIAO-YEN WU

Program Executive

University Relations and Innovation

IBM Research

Yorktown Heights, N.Y.

RESEARCH COUNCIL STAFF

CATHERINE DIDION

Study Director

1 Member, National Academy of Sciences

2 Member, Institute of Medicine

3 Member, National Academy of Engineering



June 2, 2009

Comments

Engineering Science

June 27, 2009 by Anonymous, 21 weeks 4 days ago
Comment id: 37580

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no gender bias?

June 23, 2009 by Anonymous, 22 weeks 1 day ago
Comment id: 37496

On 5 June 2009, Science Magazine reported on this study under the title "Study finds no gender bias in faculty hiring, resources." The study actually shows a much higher percentage of positions are offered to women than would be expected from their proportion of the applicant pool. For civil engineering and electrical engineering, the bias in favor of women is three-fold. For other fields, the bias is not quite as extreme, but still significant. It is not politically correct for men to be concerned about this, but I do wish there could be a more open discussion of the implications. In fact, I sometimes wonder whether "stupid male" programing to protect "the weaker sex" keeps them quiet when there is systematic bias against them. Such silence and old white male programing may have helped Congress pass legislation to create NIH's Office of Research on Women's Health in the early 1990s despite the fact that women live nearly seven years longer than men, and men over 50 are nearly three times more likely than women to suffer from heart attacks. If the situation were reversed, I suspect it would be considered a national crisis requiring a crash program to invest even more in women's health. There is no doubt that gender discrimination and harassment are problems for millions of women in the United States. I don't mean to belittle that problem. But we should not be blind to, or silent about, the ironic impact of policies and practices for the disposable sex (males).

New Report Information

June 9, 2009 by Anonymous, 24 weeks 18 hours ago
Comment id: 37156

My name is Zenneia McLendon and I am writing from the National Academies. We are excited about this newly released report and we wanted to inform your readers that this report is available to order in prepublication form or to read for free online at (http://bit.ly/Mf9Vf).

We hope that by reading the publication it will in enhance the conversation.

Best,
Zenneia McLendon

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