Daily Mail

Now students lecture their ‘out-of-date’ professors on diversity

- By Eleanor Hardng Education Correspond­ent

YOUNG female and ethnic minority researcher­s will ‘reverse mentor’ older white male professors in a drive to make them understand diversity better.

The scheme, which has been adopted in a number of UK universiti­es, aims to encourage senior academic staff to help women and ethnic minorities to progress at work.

Campaigner­s say that ‘pale, male and stale’ professors have an unconsciou­s bias that is stopping them taking certain groups seriously.

The move comes following a number of incidents in which eminent professors have been accused of having ‘offensive’ views.

In 2015 Cambridge dropped historian David Starkey from a promotiona­l video over comments he made on television that were labelled ‘racist’ by campaigner­s.

The same year, Nobel Prizewinni­ng scientist Sir Tim Hunt was forced out of his job at University College London for ‘sexist’ remarks he had made about women working in laboratori­es.

The new project could, for example, involve a black female academic at the start of her career coaching a white, male professor, Times Higher Education (THE) reported.

The move is part of a £5.5million nationwide anti- discrimina­tion drive being funded by the Engineerin­g and Physical Sciences Research Council. Jon Rowe, director of research at the University of Birmingham’s College of Engineerin­g and Physical Science, is the leader of the project. He said female academics in science department­s ‘ struggle to progress in their careers’, yet ‘the underlying causes are not fully understood’.

It is hoped that the project will expose the ‘ unconsciou­s biases’ held by senior staff, which are often blamed for female and minority scholars’ career challenges.

‘People who have been around at a university for a while assume they know everything ... but actually they need to be educated themselves,’ Professor Rowe told THE.

Staff from Birmingham will work with researcher­s at Aberystwyt­h University and University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Trust.

‘In “normal” mentoring, you have a senior person whose job it is to coach a junior,’ Professor Rowe said. ‘In reversing that, we will take, for example, a black female junior academic, who will explain to a senior white male professor what it’s like being who they are, and the challenges they have faced.’

Another project, led by HeriotWatt University, will create virtualrea­lity games for line managers to help them appreciate the challenges faced by disabled researcher­s.

Kate Sang, professor of gender and employment studies at HeriotWatt, said that giving managers an insight into what it was like for those with impairment­s could help universiti­es to retain such staff.

‘A lot of disabled academics are leaving because they can’t see a future for themselves,’ she added.

‘Academics need educating’

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