Where are all the women?
WHEN I was a young lecturer a knock came at my
office door. “Oh”, said the young man as I opened it, “So sorry — I was looking
for Dr Reynolds.”
This is a story from the ‘olden days’ but
things have not changed that much. I think of one eminent woman friend whose
writing was criticised for “a streak of vulgarity”. Or the colleague serving on
a selection committee where a man expressed surprise at her support for another
woman because she was “so much better looking”.
Women’s under-representation in all spheres of
public life (in the UK) was the prompt for last week’s British Academy debate
at the Culture Capital Exchange’s Inside Out Festival: ‘Where are all the
women?’
Speakers included women working in film,
business, nursing and the police, as well as two representatives from higher
education, traditionally a place where women seem assured of a presence.
Vicki Bruce, head of the school of psychology
at Newcastle University, argued that we still need more role models, more
portraits of achieving women on the walls.
Meanwhile, Morag
Shiach, vice-principal and executive dean at Queen Mary, University of London,
wants to see the sector address the lack of women at senior management levels.
According to the Higher Education Statistics
Agency, just under 20 per cent of all UK staff who hold the title of professor
are women, though women make up nearly 45 per cent of the sector’s academic
staff. Women in non-academic roles constitute the majority, but few occupy the
most senior roles.
Something needs to be done — and done soon.
Because there is a new problem creeping up on higher education. The women
themselves.
Too often women are choosing not to go on with
their studies at postgraduate level or, where they do, not choosing a life in
academia at the end of them. At undergraduate level, it is hard to maintain the
virtues of anonymous assessment with the introduction of virtual learning where
everything links back to a name.
And though money troubles beset everyone,
girls are more often reminded of their ‘selfishness’ in studying for a PhD.
Once awarded a PhD, young academics face the
prospect of short-term contracts and need to be willing to move jobs. Women
find this more challenging than men. But they also worry about the impact of
career breaks necessitated by children, or the need to care for elderly
relatives.
Add in the fact that
they are often advised that success is more difficult for women, and you wonder
that there are any women academics at all.
Finally, at the highest levels, the most
senior management positions are judged on research output rather than teaching
expertise and — for all the above reasons — women are likely to have done more
of the latter.
The offices of principals and vice-chancellors
are governed by long working hours which are by no means family friendly. And
so women do not apply.
What can we do about it? Last year, the
Guardian Higher Education Network published a series of answers from top women
academics ranging from mentoring to self-promotion. A new book by Elisabeth J
Allan, Women’s Status in Higher Education: Equity Matters, recommends more
strategies.
Of course, we should be thinking about colour,
race, experience, class too. If we don’t have difference and diversity now in
higher education then we won’t have it in the future. ‘No woman ever produced a
Shakespeare’ goes the taunt. The proper response is: ‘Well, who did then?’ We
need Shakespeare’s mother, his sister and his daughters in our universities
too.
— The Guardian, London
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