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492.1 | Women and Science: Part 2 | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Wed Mar 08 1989 17:44 | 109 |
| A review of these issues yields intriguing information about American
education and attitudes. It also reveals some startling developments in
the practice of science. Women scientists are challenging male
colleagues to reconsider customary ways of doing science. They are even
questioning bedrock principles of modern science, including the
scientific method itself. The nation's first response to the news of
shortages in the sciences was to draw on its post-Sputnik experience.
When the United States determined in the late 1950s that it needed more
and better scientists and engineers, it fired up educational engines,
offered new career incentives, and allocated federal funds to underwrite
these initiatives.
The Solution Is Child's Play
The formula behind John Opel's secret weapon looked easy: to double the
number of scientists and engineers, double the number of sexes entering
those professions. But the reasons why women have not entered science in
proportion to their numbers are complex. Addressing them requires new
thinking about old attitudes and behaviors.
Most social scientists believe the problem has stemmed from what girls
are taught, directly and indirectly, from infancy onward. Sociologist
Nancy Chodorow observes that in order to develop an autonomous sense of
self, the infant boy must deny the maternal relationship, whereas
self-determination of the female infant does not require gender
separation. Male self-definition produces personalities emphasizing
autonomy, independence, solitary endeavor, and competition; in the
female, the process engenders intimacy, nurturing, and communal
behavior.
These early traits have traditionally been reenforced and extended,
first by parents, then by teachers. The toys offered to boys, for
example, have emphasized competition, achievement, and problem-solving,
while those for girls have encouraged care-taking skills, community
consciousness, and supportive behavior. Male toddlers have played with
blocks and mechanical toys, girls with dolls. When parents help with
homework, they have tended to take the mathematics needs of boys more
seriously than those of girls. While this stereotyping has been given
much attention in the popular press, and many parents make a conscious
effort to avoid it, the practice is still common.
Schoolteachers, too, have treated boys and girls differently. Even very
recent studies of classrooms show teachers encouraging and rewarding
mathematics and science endeavor in males more than in females, even
when they are of equal ability. Girls who excel in mathematics and
science in the teen years may suffer socially. Teenage culture demands
conformity, and the girl scientist is still seen as a maverick.
Against this background, the findings of educational researcher
Jacquelynne Eccles come as no surprise: beginning in the ninth grade,
and increasing thereafter, girls develop lower expectations of
themselves in science and mathematics than do boys, even when their
abilities and talents are comparable. Low self-expectations diminish
performance as well as motiviation, and before long, needlessly low
expectations are fulfilled. In September 1988, a "Science Report Card"
issued by the Educational Testing Service confirmed this diagnosis: boys
outperform girls by increasing margins as they progress through high
school.
Educators Seek to Unleash the Power of High Expectations
Educators inaugurated reforms beginning in the 1970s to combat these
forces. Special training programs were designed to foster sex-neutral
science teaching.
But much more must be done if girls and boys are to achieve equally in
science. Hood professor Dean Wood believes that a hands-on approach in
the early grades is one key. He has developed a particularly effective
program to teach elementary school teachers how to bring science allive
for _all_ children. Along with biology professor Paul Hummer, he is
disseminating this approach nationwide. Featuring concrete laboratory
experiences that require active teacher and pupil participation, the
curriculum promotes male-female equality in opportunities and rewares.
Professor Wood says: "The teachers -- most of whom are women -- teach
science by doing science. And the role model lesson is not lost on the
children, boys and girls alike."
Reforms like this have recieved major government grant support, and
there is reason to believe they are making a difference. More girls are
entering college with scientific interests. From 1970 to the mid-1980s,
the percentage of women receiving baccalaureate degrees in the sciences
increased by half, doubled in computer science, and tripled in
engineering. Noting the erosion of the belief that girls are ill-suited
to science and dislike it, a leading mathematician recently declared,
"We have ample evidence that a significant number of women are not only
capable of doing mathematics and science, they also _enjoy_ it."
Hood professor Elizabeth Chang agrees that women undergraduates are
doing better in math, and liking it. Even those who have trouble with
math have brighter outlooks today than they did just a few years ago,
she says. Instead of giving up math, they work their way through it. "My
students," says Professor Chang, "increasingly approach the subject as a
challenge, not as a painful and mysterious enigma."
Hood biologist John Commito observes the same attitudinal change. He
says he sees more and more freshmen who _expect_ to be good scientists.
"They don't think of it as extraordinary or different any more." And
Allen Flora, who teaches physics at Hood, says the majority of his
freshmen already have studied the subject in high school. Hood women
arrive at college expecting to succeed.
At Hood, as at many other colleges, attracting and supporting female
science students is a priority. Professors and deans begin recruiting
students for science before they even get to campus. "Science days" for
high school students and "science camps" for younger children are
becoming a regular feature at colleges committed to science education.
|
492.2 | Women and Science: Part 3 | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Wed Mar 08 1989 17:49 | 45 |
| Hood faculty members see their educational responsibilites extending
well beyond classroom instruction. Professor Hummer, for example, says
he is "as concerned about students' confidence as about their
competence." A positive attitude and good self-image are as important to
success in science as good grades on examinations -- perhaps moreso. "We
must do more than train students," Hummer says. "Young women who are
truly engaged in science are empowered for life."
Mentors and Models
Most college science teachers agree that one-on-one mentoring is central
to the "empowering" process. Hood chemist Sharron Smith says she knows
the reason for the high success rate of Hood students who apply for
admission to medical, dental, and graduate chemistry programs, and of
those who enter science careers directly from college. "It's the
hands-on experience with equipment and instrumentation, the regular
access to real-world internships, and most of all the mentoring -- the
close student-faculty learning experiences in the laboratory and in the
field," she says. "These give the Hood science education its integrity
and authenticity."
Provisions made for mentoring at colleges have been documented by
Elizabeth Tidball, who is a member of Hood's board of trustees and a
professor of physiology at the George Washington University Medical
Center. Small colleges usually sponsor more one-on-one laboratory and
fieldwork in science than do larger institutions, and this is the
generally accepted explanation of the data Tidball reports. For both men
and women, liberal arts colleges produce more students who subsequently
achieve the Ph.D. degree in science than do universities. And women's
colleges are the most productive sources of women who go on to earn
Ph.D. degrees in the sciences.
The proportion of women science faculty in women's colleges is
significantly higher than in other institutional types (45.5 percent at
women's colleges, 4.6 percent at technical institutes, 11.4 percent at
coeducational institutions), according to a 1986 article. This makes a
big difference, according to Elizabeth Tidball. She offers her data as
"another statistical confirmation of the role model theory: the more
adult women of accomplishment present in the environment, the more
likely are women students to proceed to their own post-college
accomplishments."
|
492.3 | Women and Science: Part 4 | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Wed Mar 08 1989 17:53 | 73 |
| Biologist Ann Boyd recalls that her own scientific education was devoid
of women role models until a very late stage. She speaks glowingly of
her first female mentor, encountered during a postdoctoral fellowship,
who taught her valuable lessons about competing in the world of male
science ("If you want to succeed, make sure your work is excellent
beyond questions") and about combining an active research career with
quality family life ("You'll have to give up something, so make it
administrative and committee work").
Professor Boyd's only regret is that her female mentor appeared so late.
Her determination to act as a mentor for Hood students is widely shared
by others at the College. Both women and men professors regularly bring
undergraduates into working research partnerships with them.
When faculty members engage students directly in science, and when the
role models are appropriate, students respond positively. Hood's
unusually strong student-retention record in the sciences seems a
natural outcome. Over the most recent five-year period, about 20 percent
of entering freshmen have expressed preferences for majors in the
sciences and mathematics; by graduation, the number majoring in the
sciences has ranged as high as 24 percent.
With all these signs of success, educators should be pleased. But many
believe the glass is still half-empty. Though the percentage of women
training for scientific careers is increasing, the actual _numbers_
remain low, especially in comparison with the numbers of men. In the ten
years from 1977 to 1986, doctorates in the life sciences, physical
sciences (including mathematics and computer science), and engineering
awarded annually to women in the U.S. increased from 1,532 to 2,943 (up
52 percent), while the numbers awarded to men increased only marginally
from 10,410 to 10,961 (up only 5 percent). In 1971, one woman for every
12 men earned a science Ph.D.; by 1986, the ratio had improved to 1:4,
but parity is still a distant goal In a 1988 article in _Science_, MIT
professor Sheila E. Widnall observes that the number of women earning
Ph.D.s in the sciences has reached a plateau in many fields, a situation
she suggests may reflect a graduate school environment that is
considerably less hospitable to women than to men. Educators are
therefore redoubling efforts to defeat sex-based stereotypes and to make
science more appealing to female students, as well as to sensitize
college and university faculty to the effect of the classroom status quo
on would-be women scientists.
Even as access to science improves, another issue demands attention.
Women scientists are not satisfied with simply being brought to the
threshold of scientific careers. They expect a fair chance to succeed in
those careers and to lead satisfying professional lives.
Many women scientists say tehy feel frustrated and undervalued, that
their careers are stunted and unfulfilled. Hood biologist Hummer
suggests why: "Anyone who has worked in an active research lab will tell
you that women are nearly always among the best scientists, but not
enough of them hold leadership positions in the big labs." Participants
in a recent Stanford University symposium, noting that women's careers
in science are generally less successful than men's in terms of
professional advancement and research productivity, observed that "the
apparent discrepancy between the success rates of women and men in
science is a tragedy for women and a loss of intellectual power for the
nation."
Caution: Men at Work
Marion Namenwirth, a geneticist, claims sex discrimination in the
sciences, motivated by male competitiveness, slows women's career
progress. "Maintaining an army of productive women scientists at the
lowest echelons of the profession has been fundamental to the
advancement of men sciencests," she says. The infamous treatment of
Rosalind Franklin is a case often cited. Her measurements and
interpretations of X-ray diffractions patterns in the DNA B-chain were
critical to solving the DNA molecule puzzle in the 1950s. But James
Watson and Francis Crick, who shared a Nobel prize for discovering the
DNA double helix, failed to acknowledge their scientific debt to her.
|
492.4 | Women and Science: Part 5 | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Wed Mar 08 1989 17:58 | 31 |
| Women scientists also worry about unintentional sexism arising from
unconscious, traditional behavior among men scientists, who expect
research and inquiry to follow established patterns and customs --
established, as it happens, by men. Two patterns often cited are men's
preference for a hierarchical organization of research and men's
tendency to work competititively. Women scientists often prefer to
structure work collectively, rather than hierarchically, and to relate
to colleagues cooperatively, not competitively.
But the male prefernces govern science. Career "success" is understood
and rewarded within the context of male values. According to Namenwirth,
men express a "drive toward personal power, prestigue, authority, and
dominion over property and personnel" in the research laboratory
setting, and these considerations determine tenure, promotion, salary,
research grants, invitations to join prestigious faculties, prize
nominations, and other career rewards.
Hood trustee Elizabeth Tidball points out that women scienctists are
caught in a double bind. If they succeed by adopting the male career
model, they may be criticized for behavior unbecomin women, yet if they
are supportive and self-sacrificing, as expected, they may appear to
lack the aggressive qualities associated with success. Namenwirth
illustrates the dilemma by describing differences in the way men and
women scientists present the outcomes of their research. Men speak and
write authoritatively. They communicate confidence in the accuracy,
objectivity, and importance of their work. Women often speak of the
limitations of their data, potential flaws in experimental design, the
need for further research. The women's approach may be intellectually
honest and scientifically sound, but it lacks the traditional
ingredients of "success".
|
492.5 | Women and Science: Part 6 | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Wed Mar 08 1989 18:02 | 33 |
| Some scientists question the predominance of research achievement as the
mesaure of success as a science professional. The successful researcher
must be single-minded and tireless in pursuit of scientific reputation,
Hood biologist John Commito points out. "But an academic envronment like
Hood's permits the scientist to balance research, teaching, and a
fulfilling personal life," he says. "Some women -- and men -- who have
superb scientific minds find collegiate life more rewarding and useful
than pure research."
Questioning Science as We Know It
Women who do choose careers in research science increasingly call for
greater variety in accepted intellectual styles and interests of
science. If that goal could be achieved, some believe fundamental change
might occur in the very nature of scientific inquiry. Their speculation
is built in part on the notion that science inevitably reflects values.
Thomas Kuhn's famous book _The_Structure_of_Scientific_Revolutions_
(1970) demonstrated that science is never value-free. He showed that
even the most sacred scientific "truths," like Newton's laws, are rooted
in cultural and historical paradigns -- large complexes of ideas and
assumptions that determine the structure of scientific knowledge and
inquiry. Ruth Bleier, a geneticist, agrees with Kuhn's analysis and
applies it to contemporary science. "While the structure of science has
its edges pure and probing into the knowable and the unknown," she
writes, "its massive core, like all institutions, embodies, protects,
and perpetuates the thoughts and ideas of those who are dominant in the
society that produces it." _The_scientific_method_itself_ is part of a
contemporary paradigm, she claims. It protects and projects the
intellectual, professional, and personal interests of scientific
investigators, most of whom are men.
|
492.6 | Women and Science: Part 7 (last installment) | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Wed Mar 08 1989 18:06 | 115 |
| Some scientists question the predominance of research achievement as the
mesaure of success as a science professional. The successful researcher
must be single-minded and tireless in pursuit of scientific reputation,
Hood biologist John Commito points out. "But an academic envronment like
Hood's permits the scientist to balance research, teaching, and a
fulfilling personal life," he says. "Some women -- and men -- who have
superb scientific minds find collegiate life more rewarding and useful
than pure research."
Questioning Science as We Know It
Women who do choose careers in research science increasingly call for
greater variety in accepted intellectual styles and interests of
science. If that goal could be achieved, some believe fundamental change
might occur in the very nature of scientific inquiry. Their speculation
is built in part on the notion that science inevitably reflects values.
Thomas Kuhn's famous book _The_Structure_of_Scientific_Revolutions_
(1970) demonstrated that science is never value-free. He showed that
even the most sacred scientific "truths," like Newton's laws, are rooted
in cultural and historical paradigns -- large complexes of ideas and
assumptions that determine the structure of scientific knowledge and
inquiry. Ruth Bleier, a geneticist, agrees with Kuhn's analysis and
applies it to contemporary science. "While the structure of science has
its edges pure and probing into the knowable and the unknown," she
writes, "its massive core, like all institutions, embodies, protects,
and perpetuates the thoughts and ideas of those who are dominant in the
society that produces it." _The_scientific_method_itself_ is part of a
contemporary paradigm, she claims. It protects and projects the
intellectual, professional, and personal interests of scientific
investigators, most of whom are men.
The scientific method conducts inquiry by establishing hypotheses,
testing them empirically by controlling variables and measuring as
exactly as possible, and then drawing conclusions about cause and
effect. The method is not value-free. Human judgment enters into
selecting hypotheses, controlling variables, observing reactions and
changes, inferring from data, and reaching conclusions. Some women
scientists believe male values have occasionally led scientific inquiry
in wrong directions.
They cite the case of primate biology. In 1984, _The_New_York_Times_
reported, "We have learned more about primate behavior in the last 10
years than in the previous 10 centuries.... An explosion of knowledge
about monkeys and apes is overturning long-held stereotypes about sex
roles and social patterns among the closest kin to humans in the animal
world." The "explosion of knowledge" was detonated by women asking new
questions; the "long-held stereotypes" were long-held by men.
One stereotype was the notion that female primates were sexually "coy,"
discriminating, monogamous, and submissive. Sarah Hrdy has shown that
females actively manage sexual consortships. They solicit male partners,
often promiscuously, and pursue sexual encounters beyond apparent
reproductive requirements. This observation of female multiple mating
behavior permits several new genetic and physiological hypotheses and
could modify Darwinian natural selection theories that assume male
competitiveness as a motive force of evolution.
Earlier theories of evolution assumed that males controlled genetic
selection -- strong males competed more effectively than weak in sexual
pairing -- and females controlled nurturing. Revisionist primatologists
show that behaviors of both sexes interactively affect genetic
selection. Sarah Hrdy says women primatologists prompted the revision by
bringing "a whole new set of assumptions and ressearch questions" to the
discipline.
**** Nobel laureate Barbara McClintock is a casebook example of a departure
from scientific orthodoxy. Her great contributions to molecular biology
resulted from McClintock's capacity to get beyond the predominant
hierarchical thoery that assumed a "master molecule" to be the central
factor behind genetic DNA. She turned away from the established
investigative habits of narrowing the focus to a single factor and
excluding all variables. Instead, she thought contextually. By
"listening to the material," she was able to understand complex
interacting systems, including cell-to-organism and organism-to-
environment relationships, and to reach radically new and important
conclusions about genetic function.
The common theme in the work of Hrdy, McClintock, and other women
scientists is a sensitivity to the full complexity of interactive forces
in nature. The new approach is not itself a revolutionary scientific
paradigm, but it diverges from the standard scientific approach. Its
advocates envision a pluralistic science conduced by men and women in
more or less equal numbers, a science that values women's interests and
intellectual styles as much as it does men's, and that includes new
interactive and contextual perspectives along with traditional concepts.
Will this vision ever be realized? Given that cultural diversity is one
of the sources of our nation's vitality, scientific pluralism would
appear to be suited to American soil.
Scientists at Hood are optimistic. They are encouraged by the growing
numbers of young women preparing for science careers, and they believe
the careers awaiting women scientists are increasingly inviting. Ann
Boyd adds: "We know science itself is changing, though women's
contributions to change are hard to assess. Are new approaches gender-
related, or are they simply the achievements of exceptionally creative
scientists who just happen to be women?" That's a question no one can
answer definitively yet -- but it will continue to be asked.
---------------------------------
For further reading:
_Feminist_Approaches_to_Science_, Ruth Bleier, editor (New York:
Pergamon Press, 1986)
Sue Rosser, _A_Practical_Guide_to_Teaching_Science_and_Health_from_a_
_Feminist_Perspective_ (New York: Pergamon Press, 1986)
|
492.7 | random ramblings | CIVIC::JOHNSTON | OK, _why_ is it illegal? | Thu Mar 09 1989 09:00 | 76 |
| Interesting and thought provoking reading.
While I agree that the reasoning is sound, a few thoughts keep
bubbling up with me when I read articles such as this:
1. Much is written about girls/women entering into and excelling
in fields traditionally dominated by boys/men. Much is made
of their laudable success; however, frequently the tone leaves
me with the feeling that what is being said is, "See? Girls
are just as good as boys because they can do boy-type stuff
just as well. See?"
Is it really progress to define Good-ness only in terms of success
in traditionally male-dominated areas?
To me, it seems to be giving up on the quest for equality after
only 10% of the road has been travelled.
2. Which is illustrated by "women who are truly involved in science
are empowered for life."
The statement is true as far as it goes, but then <anyone> who
is truly involved in <anything they love and do well> is
empowered for life.
My mother [God love her] was truly empowered by her commitment
to her family and to the Children's Hospital. We are not talking
one-down and exploited, she was a truly power-full woman. [Her
life would send me around the bend, but I'm not her]
I experience the _most_ empowerment through my endeavours in
the arts, although my career and my math abilities are a source
of satisfaction and pride. This although I was _actively_
encouraged by both teachers and family to pursue
math/science/engineering and my interest in the arts was merely
tolerated.
In effect all of the stress on succeeding/excelling/winning
in science/engineering/investment-banking rather ignores success
in other areas and leaves a bad taste of 'selling out' or 'not aiming
high enough' or 'not realising one's potential' to those who
choose other areas.
3. It is not surprising or remarkable that women excell in these
fields. And I find it more than mildly distasteful that in
writing about these sucesses the women are often described in
terms that are reminiscent of 'the precocious little girls that
can take on the boys at their own game and win.'
Apparently the 'game' still belongs to the boys. Well, poop.
In reading this over, I can see a lot of the old feelings coming
out to be re-lived, especially this last bit.
I vividly remember the interviewer [a woman in her mid-twenties] who
came to talk to me when I was awarded my scholarship in Civil
Engineering. Oh, I was very, very proud and thought myself pretty
remarkable; but she came into a room containing 10 brilliant young
people, 3 of whom were young women, who'd received presidential
scholarships in engineering and _only_ wanted to talk to _me_. Not
because I was the smartest, I wasn't by any quantitative measure. Not
because I was youngest, there was someone nearly a year younger. But
because I was the 'youngest _girl_' present!
I walked into the room feeling remarkable for my intelligence and
great potential. I walked out feeling remarkable more in mold of
the dog-faced boy. Heck, _I_ knew I was female! I'd known that
for 16 years. What I didn't understand, and still don't, is why
_that_ make me remarkable, when intelligence and hard work did not.
Ann
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492.8 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Thu Mar 09 1989 12:26 | 29 |
| Two comments, on different parts of the series.
I Strongly concur with the statements about women neeeding more
encouragement in math. When I was TA for a mathematically oriented
computer science course I got remarkably different questions from
the men and women in the class. The men would typically ask "What
does this question mean?", I would paraphrase the problem, and
they would go away. The women would say "I don't understand this
section." I would ask them to explain it, remind them that they
could do the work, and eventually they would leave. I probably
gave about as much technical input to each group, but the women
seemed to need much more encouragement and drawing out. There was
no significant correlation between sex and final grade.
I object to the last part. It gives two examples of women causing
a "revolution" (in Kuhn's sense of the word) and says that this is
because women think differently. Kuhn described scientific
revolutions before either of these women were well known because
there had been previous revolutions started by (predominantly)
men. Revolutions are the most exciting part of science. I don't
think it's helpful to count which revolutions were started by
which sex. The statement that men held a belief that is now
discredited because of a woman's work is simplistic. Many women
fell into the same trap. I would much prefer to say that old
beliefs die hard, and it takes an extraordinary person to create a
scientific revolution.
--David
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