
Gender Transformation in the Academy
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Published on 10. October 2014
Book
Hardback
456 pages
978-1-78441-070-4 (ISBN)
Description
Gender inequality/inequity in the academy has been evidenced globally as women outnumber men seeking degrees in institutions of higher education, but remain concentrated in the lower faculty ranks and absent from administrative positions, particularly in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines The chapters in this volume document the gender inequality in higher education in the United States as well as in Australia, Austria, Portugal, South Africa, and Sweden. They explore the reasons for it and test or suggest remedies. Several are based on projects funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), which seeks to address the issue as it is evidenced in STEM disciplines through ADVANCE, a program developed to increase the participation and advancement of women in these disciplines. The authors consider women's situation in the context of a variety of types of educational settings including community colleges, primarily undergraduate institutions, and research-intensive universities.
Reviews / Votes
Gender Transformation in the Academy enriches our understandings of the ways that gender shapes higher education and inequalities as well as opportunities, especially in scientific fields. The chapters identify ways and means for realizing gender equality in the academy through practices and policies that resolve work-family conflicts and patterns of bias, and that promote access to peer networks, awards, and positions of leadership. The chapters are distinguished further by the scope of qualitative and quantitative methods used to collect and analyze data, and by attention to a range of types of academic institutions - larger and smaller, more and less research-orientated - in the United States and throughout the world. - Mary Frank Fox, Center for the Study of Women, Science and Technology, Georgia Institute of Technology.More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Bingley
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Emerald Publishing Limited
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 29 mm
Weight
806 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78441-070-4 (9781784410704)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Content
Carving a "Third Path": Faculty Parents' Resistance to the Ideal Academic Worker Norm.
The New STEM Faculty Profile: Balancing Family and Dual Careers.
Community Colleges and the Reproduction of Gender in the Academy: Experiences of Women STEM Faculty.
Strategies of Academic Parents to Manage Work-Life Conflict in Research Abroad.
Achievement Relative to Opportunity: Career Hijacks in the Academy.
Emerging Gender Parity and Persistent Differences: Cultural Shifts among Faculty Cohorts at a Primarily Undergraduate Institution.
Department Chairs' Perspectives on Work, Family, and Gender: Pathways for Transformation.
Gendered Networks: Professional Connections of Science and Engineering Faculty.
Processes and Pathways: Exploring Promotion to Full Professor at Two Liberal Arts Colleges in the United States.
Advancement of Mid-Career Faculty Members: Perceptions, Experiences, and Challenges.
Senior Compared to Junior Women Academic Scientists: Similar or Different Needs?.
Disproportionate Awards for Women in Disciplinary Societies.
Minimizing the Influence of Gender Bias on the Faculty Search Process.
Gender Bias in Appointment Procedures for Full Professors: Challenges to Changing Traditional and Seemingly Gender Neutral Practices.
Women in Higher Education in South Africa.
Organizational Change and Gender Equity in Academia: Using Dialogical Change to Promote Positive Departmental Climates.
Critical Mass or Incremental Change? The Effects of Faculty Gender Composition in STEM.
Women in Academic Leadership.
"Someone Needs to be First": Women Pioneers as Change Agents in Higher Education Management.
Gender Transformation in the Academy.
List of Contributors.
Gender Transformation in the Academy: An Introduction.
About the Authors.
Copyright page.
Information for Authors.
Gender Transformation in the Academy.
Advances In Gender Research.
The New STEM Faculty Profile: Balancing Family and Dual Careers.
Community Colleges and the Reproduction of Gender in the Academy: Experiences of Women STEM Faculty.
Strategies of Academic Parents to Manage Work-Life Conflict in Research Abroad.
Achievement Relative to Opportunity: Career Hijacks in the Academy.
Emerging Gender Parity and Persistent Differences: Cultural Shifts among Faculty Cohorts at a Primarily Undergraduate Institution.
Department Chairs' Perspectives on Work, Family, and Gender: Pathways for Transformation.
Gendered Networks: Professional Connections of Science and Engineering Faculty.
Processes and Pathways: Exploring Promotion to Full Professor at Two Liberal Arts Colleges in the United States.
Advancement of Mid-Career Faculty Members: Perceptions, Experiences, and Challenges.
Senior Compared to Junior Women Academic Scientists: Similar or Different Needs?.
Disproportionate Awards for Women in Disciplinary Societies.
Minimizing the Influence of Gender Bias on the Faculty Search Process.
Gender Bias in Appointment Procedures for Full Professors: Challenges to Changing Traditional and Seemingly Gender Neutral Practices.
Women in Higher Education in South Africa.
Organizational Change and Gender Equity in Academia: Using Dialogical Change to Promote Positive Departmental Climates.
Critical Mass or Incremental Change? The Effects of Faculty Gender Composition in STEM.
Women in Academic Leadership.
"Someone Needs to be First": Women Pioneers as Change Agents in Higher Education Management.
Gender Transformation in the Academy.
List of Contributors.
Gender Transformation in the Academy: An Introduction.
About the Authors.
Copyright page.
Information for Authors.
Gender Transformation in the Academy.
Advances In Gender Research.