Cultural Change; Broadening the Metrics for Promotion
Astronomy

Cultural Change; Broadening the Metrics for Promotion


The UK's House of Commons Science and Technology Committee recently released a set of recommendations for promoting "Women in Scientific Careers". The report includes numerous useful references to studies describing the range of obstacles to recruitment and retention, as well as useful references to studies providing remedies and solutions for these obstacles. 

However, many found the report 'weak', particularly in terms of failing to address the structural changes needed in academia to tackle inequality. For example, women faculty at the University of Cambridge published a letter in the Times Higher Education calling specifically for changes in how academics are assessed so that women do not face disadvantages for taking on tasks in teaching, administration and public engagement, rather than research. The letter says that a broader set of metrics should be used to evaluate performance and determine promotion.

To quote Cambridge Professor Athene Donald, outspoken advocate for gender equality, "There will always be hardcore metrics for academics, such as grants, or prizes won, and books and papers published, and they are important. But there are opportunities to reward and embed different types of success, such as teaching, outreach and departmental support."

In "The Ivory Ceiling of Service Work: Service work continues to pull women associate professors away from research. What can be done?", the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) described policy recommendations to shift the service culture within academia. They wrote:
Cultural changes also matter. Deans and department chairs or heads need to examine teaching, advising, mentoring, and service responsibilities to ensure that all faculty members pull their weight and are rewarded accordingly. Department chairs should review service, teaching, and mentoring expectations with their department members and ensure that women do not disproportionately carry their departments? service burdens. 
We also believe that cultural changes are needed to stress the value of the work of the professoriate more broadly. Too many faculty members and administrators devalue the importance of ?institutional housekeeping,? even though it is crucial for the institution?s ongoing health. Universities need to recognize, reward, and publicize their faculty?s service, mentoring, and teaching accomplishments, in addition to their research accomplishments, and ensure that promotions recognize the wide range of contributions faculty make.
Valuing this work (and, importantly, including it in the metrics for reward and promotion) likely not only helps retain/promote women at later stages in their career, but assist in the recruitment and retention of early career women. Meredith Hughes recently published the results from the Committee on the Status of Women in Astronomy (CSWA) Demographics Survey. In the latter half of the post, she describes the emerging trend that "as the representation of women in a department increases at one level, it tends to increase at other levels as well ? and over the past 10 years departments have become more polarized in their representation of women... In 2003, there was no trend relating the fraction of female faculty to the fraction of female students and postdocs, but, over the past decade, such a trend has emerged in the data. While it is impossible to discern cause and effect from the simple data collected for our survey, it seems probable that whatever departments are doing (or not doing) to actively recruit, support, and retain women at one level is affecting women at other levels as well. Perhaps, with the increased number of women at all levels, it is more obvious when a department is particularly supportive or unsupportive, and therefore departments are becoming more polarized as women vote with their feet."









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