Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Women in science: Why so few?
- 1 The science career pipeline
- 2 Women and science: Athena Bound
- 3 Gender, sex and science
- 4 Selective access
- 5 Critical transitions in the graduate and post-graduate career path
- 6 Women's (and men's) graduate experience in science
- 7 The paradox of critical mass for women in science
- 8 The ‘kula ring’ of scientific success
- 9 Women's faculty experience
- 10 Dual male and female worlds of science
- 11 Differences between women in science
- 12 Social capital and faculty network relationships
- 13 Negative and positive departmental cultures
- 14 Initiatives for departmental change
- 15 International comparisons
- 16 Athena Unbound: Policy for women in science
- Appendix
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - The paradox of critical mass for women in science
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Women in science: Why so few?
- 1 The science career pipeline
- 2 Women and science: Athena Bound
- 3 Gender, sex and science
- 4 Selective access
- 5 Critical transitions in the graduate and post-graduate career path
- 6 Women's (and men's) graduate experience in science
- 7 The paradox of critical mass for women in science
- 8 The ‘kula ring’ of scientific success
- 9 Women's faculty experience
- 10 Dual male and female worlds of science
- 11 Differences between women in science
- 12 Social capital and faculty network relationships
- 13 Negative and positive departmental cultures
- 14 Initiatives for departmental change
- 15 International comparisons
- 16 Athena Unbound: Policy for women in science
- Appendix
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
At each transitional point the number of women decreases at a significantly higher rate than men. Thus, while women made up 37% of the students taking physics in U.S. high schools in 1988, only 22% of those taking the calculus-based introductory physics course in college were women (AIP, 1988, 1991). Women's presence is reduced to 15% of those receiving the bachelor's degree in physics and then to 10% of the share of Ph.D.s. The decline continues in the shift from education to academic employment, with women constituting 7% of assistant professors of physics and only about 3% of full professors.
What are the effects of such small numbers on the women who persist in scientific careers? A key finding in our interviews was that as the number of women faculty members in a department increased, they divided into distinct subgroups that could be at odds with each other. Senior female scientists typically shared the values and workstyles of older men; their narrow focus failed to meet the needs of most younger women. In contrast, some younger women (and a few men) struggled to create an alternative scientific role, balancing work and non-work issues. The scientific role thus divides along generational and gender fault lines. These developments have significant unintended consequences for the socialization of female scientists – for example, the availability of relevant role models.
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- Athena UnboundThe Advancement of Women in Science and Technology, pp. 105 - 114Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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