|
|
Liberal Education, Winter 2005
Pipeline to Pathways: New Directions for Improving
the Status of Women on Campus
By Judith S. White |
For the past thirty years, much of the
effort to improve the status of women in higher education
has focused on the so-called "pipeline" theory,
which held that a large number of women undergraduates and
graduate students would, over time, yield larger numbers of
women at the highest academic ranks. In other words, getting
more women into college, encouraging them to pursue graduate
and professional education, and recruiting them into the academy
was supposed to create a growing "pool" from which
search committees would select ever larger numbers of women
assistant professors. These women, in turn, would earn tenured
positions and, eventually, be promoted to the rank of full
professor. The end result would be many women flowing out
of the "pipeline" to swell the most senior ranks
of the faculty and administrative leadership positions.
But that has not happened. Although women
of color remain underrepresented, women students in the aggregate
now constitute nearly half of the graduate and professional
student populations at American doctoral institutions--and
have for most of the last decade. At those same institutions,
however, the number of women holding full professorships has
come nowhere near matching this achievement. While in 1998
women made up 42 percent of new all PhD recipients, the portion
of women faculty in the senior tenured positions at doctoral
research institutions had reached only 13.8 percent--up
from 6.1 percent in 1974. At master's and bachelor's
degree-granting institutions over those same years, the starting
points were higher and the percentage gains a bit lower--from
12.9 percent to 21.3 percent and from 14.1 percent to 21.8
percent, respectively (Benjamin 2003). A new set of reports
on the status of women at research universities confirms that
their numbers for women full professors have not increased
in the past five years.1 Indeed these studies reveal that
even those women who become full professors are much less
likely to hold endowed chairs than are their male colleagues.
Something about this pipeline is not working.
Why have we not seen a faster increase
in the number of women entering academic careers and moving
up to the top rank of the faculty? The apparent failure of
the thirty-year-old pipeline, and the current attempts to
explain it, have implications for how we seek gender equity
on our campuses in the coming decades. Our successes in the
future will depend on how far we are willing to go in questioning
the assumptions behind our current system for supporting and
recognizing women faculty. Real progress in creating gender
equity in the future will require acknowledging the gendered
state of our current workplace.
Analyzing the failed pipeline
A number of recent reports from various
campuses and from national organizations indicate that, increasingly,
new research is focused on analyzing the failure of the pipeline.
One early amendment to the pipeline theory, offered as the
counterevidence mounted over the last decade, suggested that
the pipeline is "leaking" all along the way, that
attrition is a more powerful phenomenon than we had counted
on. Nan Keohane, president emerita of Duke University and
chair of the Steering Committee for the Women's Initiative
at Duke, rejects this notion. In her introduction to the committee's
report (2003, 6), Keohane suggests that "the appropriate
metaphor is of a pipeline that is obstructed at specific points."
The record at Duke reflects "stubbornly durable blockage"
at the assistant professor entrance level, and at the time
of movement to full professor and senior administrative leadership.
Recent reports from other research universities identify different
points of blockage, including disparities in rates of women
getting tenure as compared to men candidates.
Over the past five years, many new studies
of gender equity and the status of women have begun to approach
the problem of blocked movement by focusing on issues of family
formation and gender discrimination. Of course, neither of
these issues is really new. But the specificity of the research
results and the willingness of institutional leaders to grasp
the structural problems, rather than merely the personal decisions,
involved in women's "failure" to rise in
faculty ranks have created an important opportunity to rethink
the societal context of academic careers. These reports have
made clear the extent to which gender still shapes our current
workplace.
Family formation
The research of Mary Ann Mason, dean
of the graduate division at the University of California,
Berkeley, was inspired by her observation of a gathering of
graduate and professional students at opening ceremonies.
She saw before her 2,500 students, more than half of whom
were women. She was clearly pleased. Yet she knew the numbers
would not be as substantial as these women moved through their
PhD programs and into postdoctoral positions and assistant
professorships. Believing she knew at least part of the problem,
Mason and her colleague Marc Goulden, research analyst for
the graduate division, began their research (2002) with the
provocative question, do babies matter? The answer was clearly
yes, babies matter; and the timing of babies matters even
more. The issue is not only childbirth, of course, but also
the continuing childrearing responsibilities that take so
much of women's time away from academic work. Evidence
that the weight of family formation pressures falls disproportionately
on women shows up early; among postdoctoral candidates at
Berkeley, for example, most women with children have considered
leaving their academic careers. For those who stay, the news
is not good. The most discouraging of Mason and Goulden's
findings is that women with a child in the household within
five years of the PhD are far less likely to achieve a tenured
faculty position than are men with a child within that same
timeframe.
Other related issues must be explored
further to determine the full range of obstacles facing women
of different groups. None of the data on women from these
family formation studies are disaggregated by race and ethnicity,
for instance, to see whether different cultural groups handle
these issues differently. While it is true that most tenured
women faculty members are not married, the impact of family
formation issues may differ according to race or ethnicity.
It is not clear how much homophobia makes "single"
life preferable for lesbian academics, or whether some "single"
women have lesbian partners. Women academics from working-class
and poor families may face additional family pressures as
they stay more closely involved with parents or siblings experiencing
economic instability.
But even this extended range of family-formation
issues cannot fully account for all the blockage of the pipeline.
While women having children later in their careers achieve
tenure at the same rate as women without children, Mason and
Goulden found that neither group achieves tenure at the same
rate as men. Something else is at work in this supposedly
gender-neutral pipeline.
Gender discrimination
In the late 1990s, senior women in the
School of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT), mostly white women without children, concluded that
their careers had been marked by a series of disadvantages
and exclusions that constitute gender discrimination. Their
perceptive and powerful analysis went beyond the usual census
counts and salary equity studies and compared the availability
of academic resources. They found that in some departments
women were clearly receiving an inequitable share of space,
lower amounts of nine-month salary paid from individual research
grants, and fewer teaching assignments and awards and distinctions.
In addition, women often were not included on important committees
and assignments within the department. This connected strongly
with reports that senior women faculty felt marginalized and
overlooked, even as their research production matched that
of their male colleagues.
The publication of this groundbreaking
report on the status of women in the MIT School of Science
(Committee on Women Faculty 1999) has changed the conversation
about the status of women in the academy in some very important
ways. It is now possible to have discussions about work conditions
and gender bias in less accusatory and more analytical terms.
Rather than asking individual women to prove claims of mistreatment,
the focus has shifted to institutional responsibility for
working conditions. Moreover, the report provides a methodology
other institutions can use to study resource allocation as
a measure of disparate treatment. For example, the National
Science Foundation's new ADVANCE program requires such
analysis as part of its focus on institutional rather than
personal conditions for women's success in science (Rosser
2003).
The report from the School of Science
received strong backing from the leadership at MIT. Moved
by what he learned from it and by his sense of institutional
responsibility for previous inaction, President Charles Vest
not only made changes at MIT, but also convened other presidents
of prestigious universities to discuss their collective response
to the situation of women in science. These presidents agreed
that their universities must be alert to existing patterns
of disparity against women as well as to the ways these patterns
interact with biases based on race, sexual orientation, class,
and other factors. They have committed themselves and their
institutions to countering these patterns before they affect
another generation of women scholars.
Missing generations of women
faculty
At this point, it seems fair to ask what,
in fact, has happened to the last several generations of women
graduate students and young women faculty. They did not all
go home to be full-time mothers. Indeed, most of these women
graduate students finished their programs, received their
PhDs, and are trying to make a life in the academy. Many are
now holding tenure-track positions in four-year colleges and
regional master's universities. Even more have made
their careers in community colleges, where the number of women
holding full professor positions is much higher than it is
in research universities. But the truth is that many of the
women PhDs are also teaching at research universities. They
have joined the ranks of the non-tenure track, often non-regular
and part-time faculty who are now teaching the majority of
undergraduate students in American universities and colleges.
Data from the American Association of
University Professors (Benjamin 2003) reveal a disturbing
subplot in the story of the pipeline to full professorship.
While we have been watching the increase in the number of
women graduate students and awaiting their arrival in the
higher ranks of the tenured faculty, we have lost sight of
another set of figures. Women did not start entering
the academy or the faculty ranks thirty years ago. Women already
were teaching in significant numbers; they were just concentrated
in lower ranks--instructor, lecturer, or "non-rank"--and in
less prestigious and lower paying institutions. The news is
that women hold an even higher percentage of those non-tenure-track
positions today than they did in 1974--up from 34 percent
to 45 percent. Indeed, women now hold a smaller percentage
of tenured positions than they did thirty years ago--down
from 24 percent to 20 percent. If we take seriously the analysis
of the pipeline and the extent to which institutions bear
responsibility for academic working conditions, we have to
ask about the status of these women and our profession.
Women's work
Research approaches that focus separately
on issues related to either family formation or gender discrimination
have yielded important insight into blockages in the pipeline.
However, it is crucial to understand how closely related these
issues are. The strongest link between women's traditional
roles in family formation and evidence of continuing gender
discrimination in the workplace is the notion that some work
belongs to women and other work does not. Unfortunately, these
gendered perceptions persist on most campuses today. While
laws about sex discrimination have changed, customs still
leave a strong pattern of women's employment in enclaves
that are clearly "women's work."
Mary Ann Mason and Marc Goulden (2002)
use body metaphors to illustrate the job segregation patterns
still in place. In their parallel male and female models,
the head represents tenure-track or ladder-rank faculty positions,
the neck represents the non-regular rank faculty, the shoulders
the management, and the torso the staff. After looking at
the numbers of those employed at the University of California,
Berkeley, they conclude that the male employment model has
a large head, barely any neck, wide shoulders, and very slim
torso. The model for women has a small head, large neck, sloping
shoulders, and a "hip problem." The numbers from
most campuses would look the same. In addition to clerical
and mid-level administrative roles, we clearly have to add
teaching as women's work. According to most recent studies,
women's work decidedly does not include being a research
professor or holding
an endowed chair.
New pathways
We face serious challenges in trying
to change the neck and hip problem of women in higher education.
But we should take advantage of the fact that, at least potentially,
the current situation for making changes in the status of
women is very different from that of thirty years ago. We
have thirty years' worth of data and thousands of stories
about women's experience in the academy. Research models
are now using that information to make visible gendered patterns
that had been difficult to grasp before. Richer data will
emerge from studies of women staff and non-regular-rank women
faculty, a more diverse pool of women that includes a higher
proportion of women of color and other groups not well represented
in our current tenure-track faculties. We also have influential
public leadership taking responsibility for our institutional
roles and calling for change. These encouraging developments
make it more likely that we can change the gendered culture
of academic work.
With funding from the Alfred P. Sloan
Foundation, the American Council on Education recently launched
Creating Options: Models for Flexible Faculty Career Pathways,
a particularly promising and timely project designed to examine
whether today's academy requires new versions of the
academic career track. The project's activities will
raise awareness of the limiting effects of the current system,
particularly the disparate impact strict tenure review timeframes
have on women and people of color. Project leaders plan to
initiate dialogue on alternative models that might provide
opportunities for academic excellence combined with fuller
personal and family lives. New career timing options could
be made available not only to women and men with young children
but also to those facing the illness of a spouse or parent,
or those at advanced stages of their careers wanting more
flexibility in their pathways to retirement.
But conversations about new pathways
to academic success and recognition will have to acknowledge
the extent to which our current way of reviewing faculty reflects
a history of male career patterns. In our culture, anything
less than the single-minded and straight-path pursuit of a
goal is seen as less "serious" and less worthy
of recognition as "excellent." This phenomenon
is the most likely explanation of what Robert Drago and Carol
Colbeck (2003) call "bias avoidance" among academic
parents. Research shows that, in general, our current efforts
to assist faculty with children are not working as intended
because many women and men are foregoing "tenure clock
extensions." They report fear either that they will
be held accountable for more scholarship since they have had
"more time" or that they will be considered less
serious about their work because they have taken "time
off." If we can find ways to rethink the single course
and create multiple routes to academic success and recognition--if
we can abandon the pipeline for new pathways--then we
will have a chance to create a new academic working culture.
The status of all women on campus
While the tenure-track process makes
many things about faculty career patterns unique, there are
many elements of the gendered workplace that are shared across
our academic culture. A key one is the notion of a strict
path to success, one that accommodates only those single-mindedly
dedicated to specific career goals. Whether in the research
lab or the finance office, women and men who find that their
lives place multiple demands on their time and attention will
face difficulties in professional evaluations. At this point,
we can safely conclude that many of the issues causing pipeline
blockages for tenure-track women faculty and, by extension,
decreasing the number of senior women eligible for academic
leadership also are affecting the status of the three largest
groups of women in the academy--women students, women
staff, and women non-regular faculty. In our current academic
culture, these groups generally would not expect to find remedies
in the same ways as the tenure-track faculty. But are the
remedies we are proposing for the tenure-track faculty going
to work if they are not tied to broader questions of gender
equity? We will not want to wait until we can change the structure
of clerical work before we address the many excellent recommendations
about improving conditions of women faculty. But we do have
to be aware that addressing gender bias in one area of the
academy is going to be very hard if we leave the historical
products of that bias in place in other parts of the system.
All women and men on our campuses need
freedom from bias and support for their personal lives, regardless
of family-formation patterns. We in higher education have
committed ourselves to ending discrimination; many campuses
have recognized that making our workplaces more "family-friendly"
is part of that. In living up to that commitment, we need
to recognize that our current structures for organizing and
evaluating work do not come free of gendered expectations.
These structures must be analyzed and challenged if we are
to encourage the excellent work we need from everyone. We
all need new pathways.
NOTE
1. Several reports on the status of women at research universities
are available online from the National Academies Web site,
www7.nationalacademies.org/
cwse/gender_faculty_links.html
References
Benjamin, Ernst. 2003. Disparities in the salaries and
appointments of academic women and men: An update of a 1988
report of Committee W on the Status of Women in the Academic
Profession. Washington, DC: American Association of University
Professors.
Committee on Women Faculty in the School of Science at MIT.
1999. A study of the status of women faculty in science at
MIT. The MIT Faculty Newsletter 11 (4): 1-17.
Drago, Robert, and Carol Colbeck. 2003. Final report
from the mapping project: Exploring the terrain of U.S. colleges
and universities for faculty and families. University
Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University. http://lsir.la.psu.edu/workfam/mappingproject.htm.
Keohane, Nannerl. 2003. Introd. to Report of the steering
committee for the women's initiative at Duke University.
Durham, NC: Duke University. www.duke.edu/womens_initiative/report_report.htm.
Mason, Mary Ann, and Marc Goulden. 2002. Do babies matter:
The effect of family formation on the lifelong careers of
academic men and women. Academe 88 (6): 21-7.
Rosser, Sue V. 2003. Attracting and retaining women in science
and engineering. Academe 89 (4): 24-8.
Judith S. White is
the assistant vice president of campus services at Duke University
and a senior fellow in AAC&U's Office of Diversity,
Equity, and Global Initiatives.
To respond to this article, e-mail liberaled@aacu.org,
with the author's name on the subject line.
|
 |
|