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Choices Determine Success For Women Scientists? Print E-mail
SciMed - Horizons
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Tuesday, 15 February 2011 09:00
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Choices determine success for women scientists?Ithaca, NY, USA. There is a pervasive belief that women are underrepresented in science, math and engineering fields because they face sex discrimination in the interviewing, hiring, and grant and manuscript review processes, but a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) says it is just not true.

Acknowledging that the subject is incendiary in academia, two Cornell University social scientists say it is not discrimination, but differences in resources that are attributable to career and family-related choices that set women back in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) fields.

The study authors are Stephen J. Ceci, professor of developmental psychology, and Wendy M. Williams, professor of human development and director of the Cornell Institute for Women in Science (CIWS), both in Cornell's College of Human Ecology. They say that the substantial resources universities expend to sponsor gender-sensitivity training and interviewing workshops would be better spent on addressing the real causes of women's underrepresentation, through creative problem-solving and policy changes that respond to differing biological and social realities of the sexes.



Science has been a field largely closed to women

Sometimes, rules against married women teaching at a university worked against the few women who were able to get degrees and teaching and research work. Sometimes nepotism rules meant that a woman quit her job and her husband kept his.

Many women worked in the background and supported more visible men in science. But some women worked against the odds and made significant contributions through their work.

Photo and caption of a woman scientist at work (ca. 1920) courtesy of the US Library of Congress.
The researchers analyzed the scientific literature in which women and men competed for publications, grants or jobs in these fields. They found no systematic evidence of sex discrimination in interviewing, hiring, reviewing or funding when men and women with similar resources — such as teaching loads and research support — were compared.

Stephen Ceci and Wendy Williams are a married couple with three daughters who co-authored The Mathematics of Sex: How Biology and Society Conspire to Limit Talented Women and Girls (2010). [ link ]"We hear often that men have a better chance of getting their work accepted or funded, or of getting jobs, because they're men," Williams said.

The authors say that "Universities expend money and time trying to combat this rampant alleged discrimination against women in the hope that by doing so universities will see the numbers of women STEM scientists increase dramatically over coming years."

The data show that women scientists are confronted with choices, beginning at or before adolescence, that influence their career trajectories and success. Women who prioritize families and have children sometimes make lifestyle choices that lead to them to take positions, such as adjunct or part-time appointments or jobs at two-year colleges, offering fewer resources and chances to move up in the ranks.

These women, however, are not held back by sex discrimination in hiring or in how their scholarly work is evaluated. Men with comparably low levels of research resources fare equivalently to their female peers. Although women disproportionately hold such low-resource positions, this is not because they had their grants and manuscripts rejected or were denied positions at research-intensive universities due to their gender.

Also, females beginning before adolescence often prefer careers focusing on people, rather than things, aspiring to be physicians, biologists and veterinarians rather than physicists, engineers and computer scientists. Efforts to interest young girls in these math-heavy fields are intended to ensure girls do not opt out of inorganic fields because of misinformation or stereotypes.

Also, fertility decisions are key because the tenure system has strong disincentives for women to have children — a factor in why more women in academia are childless than men. Implementation of "flexible options" to enhance work-family balance may help to increase the numbers of women in STEM fields, the researchers say.

As long as women make the choice and "are satisfied with the outcomes, then we have no problem," they write in the paper.

"However, to the extent that these choices are constrained by biology and/or society, and women are dissatisfied with the outcomes, or women's talent is not actualized, then we most emphatically have a problem."

The solution will only be possible if society focuses on changing the women's non-optimal choices and addressing unique challenges faced by female STEM scientists with children, the researchers say.

CitationThe research was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
CitationUnderstanding Current Causes of Women's Underrepresentation in Science. Stephen J. Ceci and Wendy M. Williams. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) 2011; ePub ahead of print. doi:10.1073/pnas.1014871108
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Abstract

Explanations for women's underrepresentation in math-intensive fields of science often focus on sex discrimination in grant and manuscript reviewing, interviewing, and hiring. Claims that women scientists suffer discrimination in these arenas rest on a set of studies undergirding policies and programs aimed at remediation. More recent and robust empiricism, however, fails to support assertions of discrimination in these domains. To better understand women's underrepresentation in math-intensive fields and its causes, we reprise claims of discrimination and their evidentiary bases. Based on a review of the past 20 y of data, we suggest that some of these claims are no longer valid and, if uncritically accepted as current causes of women's lack of progress, can delay or prevent understanding of contemporary determinants of women's underrepresentation. We conclude that differential gendered outcomes in the real world result from differences in resources attributable to choices, whether free or constrained, and that such choices could be influenced and better informed through education if resources were so directed. Thus, the ongoing focus on sex discrimination in reviewing, interviewing, and hiring represents costly, misplaced effort: Society is engaged in the present in solving problems of the past, rather than in addressing meaningful limitations deterring women's participation in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics careers today. Addressing today's causes of underrepresentation requires focusing on education and policy changes that will make institutions responsive to differing biological realities of the sexes. Finally, we suggest potential avenues of intervention to increase gender fairness that accord with current, as opposed to historical, findings.

Keywords: women in science, gender bias, child penalty, peer review.

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Last Updated on Sunday, 13 February 2011 22:26