Texas Tech researcher contributes to ‘roadmap’ for greater gender equity in academia

Today (Feb. 11) is the fifth annual

International Day of Women and Girls in Science

, a commemoration to emphasize that females should have full, equal access to the
sciences and encouragement to participate in them. Although this effort may someday
lead to a bright future of gender equality in academia, the road to get there is long.

One Texas Tech University researcher is now part of a nationwide collaboration hoping
to shorten the journey by providing a roadmap.


Emily Dhurandhar

, an assistant professor in the

Department of Kinesiology & Sport Management

, is one of the authors of ”

Turning chutes into ladders for women faculty: A review and roadmap for equity in
academia

,” published today in the

Journal of Women’s Health

.

Statistics show that women are underrepresented in the highest levels of academia,
particularly in science, technology, engineering, mathematics and medicine; they are
less likely than men to achieve tenure; and they constitute less than one-third of
full professors. Black and Hispanic women face even greater disparity. Such factors
contribute to women leaving academia at a disproportionately higher rate than men.

“Some close female friends and colleagues from my postdoctoral fellowship and I started
our faculty positions and had children around the same time,” Dhurandhar said. “We
were all running into so many issues when striving for tenure that we started a chat
group to brainstorm and exchange ideas. The issues we were troubleshooting seemed
to be universal to all women faculty striving to get tenure and succeed in academia,
so we decided to write this manuscript.”

The article presents what its authors term “chutes” and “ladders” – respectively,
the things that prevent women from rising within academia or drive them out altogether,
and the policies and strategies institutions can adopt to help women stay and advance.

Chutes include biases against marriage or having children; shortages of working-mother
role models and female mentors in general; student evaluations, which consistently
rate men higher than women; and grant-funding disparities. Culturally, women are more
likely to be the caregivers of children and/or parents, leading to a more difficult
work/life balance.

“Sometimes the hours of academia being outside a typical 9-5 workday makes for challenging
childcare situations – for example, dinners with visiting speakers or faculty candidates
or early-morning or weekend data collection in the clinic with study participants,”
Dhurandhar said. “There also is an expectation to travel to conferences to present
research and connect with collaborators, which comes with the hidden cost of either
additional childcare to help my husband when he is home alone with the kids, or travel
for the kids to join me and childcare at the conference site itself, or the cost of
travel for my mother-in-law to come with me so she can watch the kids.

“It is frustrating that the infrastructure of academia, like many industries, was
built with the expectation that faculty will be living in a single-income family structure,
where one spouse is always available for household duties, and this has yet to change.”

The ladders Dhurandhar and her coauthors suggest include mentoring programs, particularly
with senior women faculty members; equitable pay; using rubrics and peers or third
parties for standardized evaluations; and family-friendly policies such as paid family
leave, access to childcare, reimbursement for work-related childcare expenses and
scheduling networking events during the workday.

“To show a real commitment to gender equality, supportive policies at all institutions
should provide the infrastructure needed for dual-earning households to succeed without
overburdening themselves, or without one spouse having to sacrifice their success,”
Dhurandhar said. “Women need to be educated and empowered to understand their worth
when they have a career. Their role at home can, and should, change if they are expected
to contribute equally, if not more, to the financial stability of the family. But
ultimately, the demand to change the status quo in the household has to come from
women, and women first have to believe the burden of household and childcare duties
should no longer be on their shoulders alone.”

Other researchers in the collaboration represent the University of Florida, the University
of Alabama-Birmingham, Drexel University, the University of Connecticut and Penn State
University.

This part of information is sourced from https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-02/ttu-ttr021120.php

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