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Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering. Ruthanne D. Thomas, Chair Department of Chemistry University of North Texas http://mysite.directlink.net/cthomas/workshop.htm. Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering. Women in Science and Engineering receive mixed signals
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Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering Ruthanne D. Thomas, Chair Department of Chemistry University of North Texas http://mysite.directlink.net/cthomas/workshop.htm
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • Women in Science and Engineering receive mixed signals • Different individuals react differently to those signals
Women as a percentage of the U.S. labor force and of the science and engineering labor force, by field of science and engineering: 1995 s
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • Percentage of bachelor’s degrees earned by women by field of study • Source: U.S. Department of Education, NCES
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • Women are now the majority of all students at the undergraduate level • Women reached parity with men in undergraduate enrollment in 1980 • Women made up 56% of undergraduates in 1996 • Women are projected to be 58% of undergraduates by 2010 Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Digest of Education Statistics 1998 (NCES 1999-036).
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • As of 1996, women have made significant gains in undergraduate enrollment…. • Women earn almost half of the bachelors degrees in mathematics (46%) {Texas - 47%, 1998} • Women earn half (50.2%) of the bachelors degrees in the biological/agricultural sciences {54%, 1998} • Women have made significant increases in other areas where overall percentages remain low • physical sciences: 14% (1966) to 37% (1996) • engineering: 0.4% (1966) to 18% (1996) {20%, 1998}
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • …..but still lag significantly behind in some areas • Percentage of female bachelors degrees remain low in many fields, such as physics and engineering • Percentage of female bachelors degrees in Computer Science has dropped from a high of 37% (1984) to 28% (1996) {Texas - 21%, 1998}
Bachelor's degrees in computer science, by sex: 1979–96 Number Year
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • As of 1997, the percentage of females receiving doctoral degrees had reached new highs • Female doctoral degrees in all S&E fields increased from 8% (1966) to 33% (1997) • Psychology - 67% {Texas - 64%, 1998} • Biology/agricultural sciences - 41% {31%, 1998} • Engineering increased from 0.3% (1966) to 12% (1997) {10%, 1998}
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • Full-time doctoral scientists and engineers at 4-year colleges and universities (1997) Women Men Total 39,800 22.2% 139,400 77.8% Professor 6,800 10.4 58,300 89.6 Associate Prof 9,100 21.9 32,500 78.1 Assistant Prof 12,000 33.0 24,400 67.0 Instructor 1,200 44.4 1,500 55.6 Lecturer 900 40.9 1,300 59.1
Percentage of full-time ranked doctoral scientists and engineers in 4-year colleges or universities who are full professors, by sex and years since doctorate: 1997 Percent Years since doctorate
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • What are the underlying issues? • What can be/should be done?
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • What are the underlying issues? • Difference model (differences in the outlook and goals of women and men) • Deficit model (barriers to women’s progress) • G. Sonnert and G. Holton, Who Succeeds in Science? The Gender Dimension, New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1996. • G. Sonnert and G. Holton, Gender Differences in Science Careers, The Project Access Study, New Brunswick, N. J.: Rutgers University Press, 1995. • V. Valian, Why So Slow? The Advancement of Women, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998.
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • What can be/should be done? • Implement suggestions, e.g. combating the chilly climate in the classroom/improving job interviews http://www.bernicesandler.com • Find successful programs to emulate http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~lblum/women_in_computer_science.pdf • Explore whether features of deficit/difference models apply • Learn to say no • Avoid becoming isolated
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • Explore whether features of deficit/difference models apply • Deficit model • Overt gender discrimination • Opinions ignored or receive less respect during meetings? • Less access to social networks/clique of power brokers? • Difference model • Publications - Quality vs Quantity? • Personal response/institutional response • Niche research vs hot area?
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • Implement suggestions, e.g. combating the chilly climate in the classroom/improving job interviewshttp://www.bernicesandler.com • Classroom: • provide students with your academic credentials • smile factor • types of questions/who you call on in class • Job Interviews • ask meaningful, open-ended questions vs those seeking factual information
Workshop on Women in Science and Engineering • Need/Opportunities for Female Faculty • 50% of all faculty in Texas public universities are currently 50 years old • i.e. 50% of all faculty in Texas public universities will reach retirement age within 15 years • Percentage appears to be higher for science departments (expansion of science in 60’s and 70’s) • Significant need for new faculty in next 15 years • Significant opportunity to hire female faculty, if qualified individuals are available