Women gain ground in academia; science mentors needed
August 2006, page 11
Many of us in academia may feel discouraged
by the persistence of gender discrimination in science and math after reading Toni Feder's reports
"Why Women Leave Academic Physics" (PHYSICS TODAY, May 2005, page 32) and "No Leaky Pipeline for
Women in Physics, but Discrimination Persists" (PHYSICS TODAY, April 2005, page 28). However,
professors and students of science around the globeboth male and femaleshould be
pleased that Susan Hockfield took the helm of MIT, a world-renowned physical-sciences authority.
Working in a research group supervised by a female leader, I was excited to learn that two women were
promoted to head the University of Toronto's prestigious faculties of law and medicine.
Although men have historically
dominated the upper echelons of academia, the fact that more and more women are taking on high-powered
positions in top-tier academic institutions not only inspires hope that the traditionally male-dominated
field of science is undergoing a radical shift toward gender equality, but also suggests that women
are not, as has been suggested by some, less capable than men, either biologically or psychologically.
Former Harvard University
president Lawrence Summers was forced to resign after stating that the innate genetic differences
between men and women account for the preponderance of men in math- and science-related careers.
While it is undeniable that science is a male-dominated field and that there are indeed genetic
differences between men and women, the latter does not explain the former. To the contrary, it has
been established that women excel at a variety of tasks that relate to language and articulation.1
In addition, females tend to outperform males at fine-motor activities, particularly those involving
rapid, repetitive temporal sequencing,2 making them more efficient at mastering
laboratory skills.
What, then, is holding
women back?
Although the answer to
that question is highly complex and deeply rooted in societal expectations, it is important to
consider whether an ideal leader possesses qualities that more closely resemble the attributes
intrinsic to men or to women. The answer, I believe, is that the ideal leader possesses both. If one
believes that a fully functional family requires equal contributions from a father and a mother,
the same should hold true for larger institutions, from a university to an entire country.
References
1.R. Joseph, Arch. Sex. Behav.29, 35 (2000).
2.E. Hampson, D. Kimura, in Behavioral Endocrinology, J. B. Becker et al., eds., MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (1992), p. 357.
If a pipeline is
losing most of its product between the source and the first metering station, that isn't considered
a leak? I don't know any industrial scientist who would even try to sell that idea to the plant manager.
Similarly, the fact that talented, hard-working women with interests in physics, science, and
engineering are leaving the system between high school and a bachelor's degree really is a problem
that needs to be addressed. As the parent of a female undergraduate physics student contemplating
advanced degrees in this field, I know how important it is for these high-school students to find
science or engineering mentors who can take students into the labs and involve them in the excitement
of scientific discovery that lies beyond the grind of getting the tough homework doneand
maybe give help and encouragement with that homework too. My daughter was lucky enough to find such
a mentor, but most students are not.