2005 APS April Meeting
Saturday–Tuesday, April 16–19, 2005;
Tampa, FL
Session H2: Mentoring in Physics Education
8:30 AM–10:18 AM,
Sunday, April 17, 2005
Marriott Tampa Waterside
Room: Grand Salon F
Sponsoring
Units:
DNP FEd DPF DAP
Chair: Michael Thoennessen, Michigan State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.APR.H2.2
Abstract: H2.00002 : Time to Thrive, Not Just Survive: Accumulating Advantage for Women in Science
9:06 AM–9:42 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Debra Rolison
(Naval Research Laboratory)
Our departments of science, technology, mathematics, and
engineering (STEM)
need more women as faculty, and not only to show their
undergraduates that a
career in academia is a viable path. Their absence warns us
that an
unhealthy environment exists: unhealthy to those scientists who
want
fulfilling lives beyond academe and unhealthy to those women,
who once they
demonstrate productivity, scholarship, and mentorship, still
reap less
respect, space, salary, funding, and awards than their male
colleagues.
The recalcitrance of too many of our research universities
toward
diversifying their faculty is a national disgrace in that these
universities
covet a diversified student body, but do not reflect that pool
of talent
onto their faculty. Similar difficulties are apparent among the
staff of
National and Federal laboratories. Self-reform is not getting
it done, and
is especially frustrating in light of the historic opportunity
to change the
demographics as scientists and engineers hired in the 1960s
retire.
Is it time to apply the logic of Title IX--the loss of Federal
funds--for
the entrenched inability to increase the number of women
represented on STEM
faculties? Such a threat may be the impetus necessary for
university
administrators to create departmental environments that women
are willing to
call home. The July 2004 release of the GAO report on Women's
Participation
in the Sciences (which also surveyed DOE facilities) reminded
those Federal
agencies that fund scientific research that Title IX is the law
and that
these agencies must begin Title IX assessments of compliance in
the STEM
departments and institutions they fund.
It is past time that women thrive, not just survive in their
career homes.
Using the mechanistic philosophy of Title IX--denial of
resources to
recalacitrant departments and laboratories--may be the start of
a truly
inclusive scientific enterprise in the United States. We must
accept this
opportunity to redirect the nature of the research enterprise
to one that is
inclusive of diversity: both of the humans who will undertake
the S{\&}T
journey into the 21st century and of the educational and
knowledge base they
will need to take with them on that journey.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.APR.H2.2