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Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering

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ISSN Печать: 1072-8325

ISSN Онлайн: 1940-431X

SJR: 0.514 SNIP: 0.875 CiteScore™:: 2.4 H-Index: 27

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I JUST NEED SOMEONE WHO KNOWS THE ROPES: MENTORING AND FEMALE FACULTY IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

Том 18, Выпуск 1, 2012, pp. 79-96
DOI: 10.1615/JWomenMinorScienEng.2012002193
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Краткое описание

Although women are making inroads into academic science and engineering, they are under-represented in all science and engineering disciplines, are less likely to be full professors (J. Burrelli, in InfoBrief: Science Resource Statistics, NSF, Washington, DC 2008), and are more likely to have exposure to negative experiences with a sexist and hostile climate (H. Dryburgh, Gender Soc., vol. 13, pp. 664−682, 1999;. J.G. Robinson and J.S. McIlwee, Sociol. Q., vol. 32, pp. 403−421, 1991). As a result of these inequities many universities have implemented mentoring programs to provide equal career support for women and men in order to improve success in achieving tenure and promotion. The goal of this research is to report findings from a small interview study of female faculty in science and engineering, reporting their perceptions of their mentoring experiences and the role of gender in shaping those perceptions in an effort to gain insights that will help to make mentoring programs more effective. Three distinct types of mentoring emerged, including: (1) global mentoring, which was the most wide-ranging, involved and committed mentoring relationship; (2) formal targeted mentoring, which occurred in the context of a formal program, was aimed specifically toward providing advice and support toward attaining a career goal; and (3) informal targeted mentoring often initiated by the protegee herself. We found that the mentoring relationship is affected by the use of traditional gender ideology that supports the belief that being a woman and an engineer/scientist is not compatible, which has the potential to influence the mentoring relationship by making protegees feel more vulnerable to negative evaluation. Finally, we make a series of concrete recommendations for developers of mentoring programs to make them more supportive for women faculty.

Ключевые слова: mentoring, gender in science and engineering
ЦИТИРОВАНО В
  1. Thomas Nicole, Bystydzienski Jill, Desai Anand, Changing Institutional Culture through Peer Mentoring of Women STEM Faculty, Innovative Higher Education, 40, 2, 2015. Crossref

  2. Sanchez-Pena Matilde, Main Joyce, Sambamurthy Nikitha, Cox Monica, McGee Ebony, The factors affecting the persistence of Latina faculty: A literature review using the intersectionality of race, gender, and class, 2016 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), 2016. Crossref

  3. Sattari Negin, Sandefur Rebecca L., Gender in academic STEM: A focus on men faculty, Gender, Work & Organization, 26, 2, 2019. Crossref

  4. Deanna Rocío, Merkle Bethann Garramon, Chun Kwok Pan, Navarro-Rosenblatt Deborah, Baxter Ivan, Oleas Nora, Bortolus Alejandro, Geesink Patricia, Diele-Viegas Luisa, Aschero Valeria, de Leone María José, Oliferuk Sonia, Zuo Rui, Cosacov Andrea, Grossi Mariana, Knapp Sandra, Lopez-Mendez Alicia, Welchen Elina, Ribone Pamela, Auge Gabriela, Community voices: the importance of diverse networks in academic mentoring, Nature Communications, 13, 1, 2022. Crossref

  5. Gregor Margo, Dunn Marianne, Campbell-Halfaker Devynn, Martin-Fernandez Javier, Ferrer Anthony, Robinson Simone, Plugging the Leaky Pipeline:A Qualitative Investigation of Untenured Female Faculty in STEM, Journal of Career Development, 2022. Crossref

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