The Gender Gap in STEM Fields Is Due to Personnel Preferences, Scientists Say
Posted on Dec 20, 2023 | Comments 0
Fewer women pursue careers in physics than biology, and scientists from around the world believe these differences come down to personal preferences, according to a new Rice University study of international scientists. The study’s researchers warn that merely chalking this imbalance up to individual choice may diminish the push for gender equality in the sciences.
Using survey data collected from academic biologists and physicists in the U.S. (1,777 total), Italy (1,257), France (648) and Taiwan (780), the researchers examine how scientists’ social identities and the countries in which they reside shape their explanations of gender inequality in science.
Dr. Ecklund further noted how gendered processes are at work long before women make decisions about their field of study, families or other aspects of life. Prior research suggests women are influenced early on by their parents’ gender roles in the family and their occupations, which shape young women’s decisions to go into fields like science, technology, engineering, math and other gendered occupations. These occupational selections are viewed as individual choices by scientists surveyed for this study.
“When scientists draw on individualist arguments to explain gender inequality — thus ignoring these gendered processes — they may blunt initiatives that can promote women’s equity in STEM,” said Esther Chan, the co-suthor of the study from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
The full study, “Scientists Explain the Underrepresentation of Women in Physics Compared to Biology in Four National Contexts,” was published in the journal Gender, Work and Organization. It is available here.
Filed Under: Research/Study