Iran Daily

New data on gender inequality in sciences salaries

-

There is a difference between male and female physics faculty salaries and the culture of physics is partly to blame, according to an article that is available for free this month from Physics Today, the world’s most inàuential and closely followed magazine devoted to physics and the physical sciences community.

The article, ‘Salaries for female physics faculty trail those for male colleagues’, identi¿es key factors inàuencing the gender pay gap and offers potential solutions that include changes in the culture in physics department­s, phys.org wrote..

Staff writer Toni Feder combined data from a 2010 report, ‘Gender Difference­s at Critical Transition­s in the Careers of Science, Engineerin­g, and Mathematic­s Faculty’, from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g, and Medicine that looked at hundreds of institutio­ns with unpublishe­d data from the American Institute of Physics (AIP) Statistica­l Research Center (SRC). AIP is the publisher of Physics Today.

What the unpublishe­d data show is that female faculty members in physics have lower salaries compared to their equally quali¿ed male colleagues.

“The model said that if we have two people who are identical in every way, the woman will make, on average, six percent less than the man,” said Susan White, assistant director of SRC, quoted in the Physics Today article.

The National Academies’ study also found that there were inequities between men and women. Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology astronomer Claude Canizares, who co-chaired the study, explained that while universiti­es do not purposely discrimina­te against women and minorities, inequities neverthele­ss persist.

According to the Physics Today article, other studies and observatio­ns support the data, with two key reasons for the gender gap disparity. First, women are less aggressive in their salary negotiatio­ns and also less likely to ask for a raise during their tenure at an institutio­n. The second reason comes from the fact that men are overrepres­ented in some scienti¿c ¿elds, which introduces an implicit bias in university department­s.

“Boys in the department give money to boys in the department,” said a senior researcher quoted anonymousl­y in the Physics Today article.

To close the pay gap, MIT Professor Emerita Nancy Hopkins suggested that senior female faculty members need to serve on the hiring, promotion and editorial boards that are positions of power at most universiti­es.

Efforts must also include male support to promote women and minorities in science.

“It’s hard to break a glass ceiling by banging your head on it from below,” Canizares said.

“It’s easier to break it from above with a sledge hammer.”

 ??  ?? walesonlin­e.co.uk
walesonlin­e.co.uk

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran