If the top academic posts in science and engineering are disproportionately occupied by men, there can only be one explanation: sexism. Christina Hoff Summers, in a long and fascinating article in The American, outlines the brave new world where gender equity trumps all other considerations:

On October 17, 2007, a subcommittee of the House Committee on Science and Technology convened to learn why women are “underrepresented” in academic professorships of science and engineering and to consider what the federal government should do about it.

As a rule, women tend to gravitate to fields such as education, English, psychology, biol­ogy, and art history, while men are much more numerous in physics, mathematics, computer science, and engineering. Why this is so is an interesting question—and the subject of a sub­stantial empirical literature. The research on gender and vocation is complex, vibrant, and full of reasonable disagreements; there is no single, simple answer.

There were, however, no disagreements at the congressional hearing. All five expert wit­nesses, and all five congressmen, Democrat and Republican, were in complete accord. They attributed the dearth of women in university science to a single cause: sexism. And there was no dispute about the solution. All agreed on the need for a revolutionary transformation of American science itself. “Ultimately,” said Kathie Olsen, deputy director of the National Science Foundation, “our goal is to transform, institution by institution, the entire culture of science and engineering in America, and to be inclusive of all—for the good of all.”

And here’s one of the leading theoreticians of this “equity crusade”:

Virginia Valian, a psychologist at Hunter College, is one of the most cited author­ities in the crusade to achieve equity for women in the sciences. Her book Why So Slow? (MIT Press, 1998) is indispensable to the movement because it offers a solution to a vexing problem: women’s seemingly free but actually self-defeating choices. Not only do fewer women than men choose to enter the physical sciences, but even those who do often give child care and family a higher priority than their male colleagues. How, in the face of wom­en’s clear tendencies to choose other careers and more balanced lifestyles, can one reasonably attribute the scarcity of women in science and engineering to unconscious bias and sexist dis­crimination? Valian showed the way.

Her central claim is that our male-dominated society constructs and enforces “gender sche­mas.” A gender schema is an accepted system of beliefs about the ways men and women differ—a system that determines what suits each gender. Writes Valian: “In white, Western middle-class society, the gender schema for men includes being capable of independent, autonomous action…[and being] assertive, instrumental, and task-oriented. Men act. The gender schema for women is different; it includes being nur­turant, expressive, communal, and concerned about others.”

Valian does not deny that gender schemas have a foundation in biology, but she insists that culture can intensify or diminish their power and effect. Our society, she says, pressures women to indulge their nurturing propensities while it encourages men to develop “a strong commitment to earning and prestige, great dedication to the job, and an intense desire for achievement.” All this inevitably results in a permanently unfair advantage for men.

To achieve a gender-fair society, Valian advocates a concerted attack on conventional gender schemas. This includes altering the way we raise our children. Consider the custom of encouraging girls to play with dolls. Such early socialization, she says, creates an association between being female and being nurturing. Valian concludes, “Egalitarian parents can bring up their children so that both boys and girls play with dolls and trucks…. From the standpoint of equality, nothing is more important.”

But what if our daughters are not especially interested in trucks, as almost any parent can attest (including me: when my son recently gave his daughter a toy train to play with, she placed it in a baby carriage and covered it with a blanket so it could get some sleep)? Not a problem, says Valian.

“We don’t accept biol­ogy as destiny…. We vaccinate, we inoculate, we medicate…. I propose we adopt the same attitude toward biological sex differences.” In other words, the ubiquitous female propensity to nurture should be treated as a kind of disor­der or disease.

Valian is intent on radically transforming society to achieve her egalitarian ideals. She also wants to alter the behavior of successful scientists. Their obsessive work habits, sin­gle-minded dedication, and “intense desire for achievement,” not only marginalize women, but also may compromise good science. She writes, “If we continue to emphasize and reward always being on the job, we will never find out whether leading a balanced life leads to equally good or better scientific work.”

Valian may be a leader in the equity-in-sci­ence movement, but she is not an empirical thinker. A world where women (and resocial­ized men) earn Nobel Prizes on flextime has no relation to reality. Unfortunately, her outré worldview is not confined to women’s studies. It is a guiding light for some of the nation’s lead­ing scientific institutions.

Valian’s book is trumpeted on the NSF/NAS “Top Research” list, and Valian herself has inspired the NSF’s ADVANCE gender-equity program. In 2001, the NSF awarded Valian and her Hunter colleagues $3.9 million to develop equity programs and workshops for the “sci­entific community at large.” Should Congress pass the Gender Bias Elimination Act, which mandates workshops for university department chairs, members of review panels, and agency program officers seeking federal funding, Valian will become one of the most prominent women in American scientific education.

So, if the world isn’t as you think it should be, then you force it into shape. I think we’ve been here before.

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5 responses to “The Equity Crusade”

  1. Dom Avatar
    Dom

    There is a real conradiction in the American version of Affirmative Action. On the one hand, we are told that diversity is necessary (“…to be inclusive of all—for the good of all.”) because we can then use so many different talents. On the other hand, we are told that people are random events and devoid of unique talents, and therefore we need an even distribution across all endeavors.
    And don’t you just love that “white, Western middle-class society” jazz? Right. The genders are so equal in the Middle East.

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  2. DaninVan Avatar
    DaninVan

    From today’s ‘Vancouver Sun’:
    “Women poised
    to dominate doctors’ offices
    But they are avoiding surgical jobs, survey finds
    BY MARIA KUBACKICanwest News Service
    In the future, chances are you will have a female doctor — unless you need a hip replacement, a triple bypass or brain surgery.
    Women are streaming into Canadian medical schools and are poised to dominate fields such as family medicine, psychiatry, and obstetrics/gynecology. But, they’re staying away from surgery in droves — avoiding fields where work-life balance sometimes means coming home to kiss the kids goodnight before being called to the hospital for an emergency.
    The majority of first-year medical students in Canada are women, almost 60 per cent across the country and nearly 70 per cent at some universities in Quebec. Although women account for only a third of all physicians in Canada, more than half of doctors under 35 are female, according to a recent National Physician Survey.
    With the average doctor set to hit retirement age in the next 15 years, the Canadian health-care system is on the cusp of a profound shift. Some areas of medicine will become female-dominated, but most surgical specialties — except obstetrics/ gynecology — remain male bastions.
    In neurosurgery, cardiac surgery and orthopedic surgery, the proportion of female doctors currently hovers below 10 per cent nationally, statistics from the Canadian Medical Association show.
    Men also dramatically outnumber women among young doctors training in surgery: The proportion of female residents in neurosurgery is just 18 per cent, 15 per cent in orthopedic surgery, and 11 per cent in cardiac surgery and general surgery, according to the 2007 Canadian Medical Education Statistics.
    Fields that have traditionally attracted women are more popular. Three-quarters of residents in obstetrics/gynecology and two-thirds of residents in family and pediatrics are women. Female residents are also in the majority in psychiatry and geriatric medicine.
    Certain specialties may always appeal more to men, speculates Canadian Medical Association president Dr. Brian Day of Vancouver, citing his own field, orthopedic surgery.
    “Orthopedics is somewhat of a carpentry type branch of medicine. And women don’t tend to become carpenters.”
    But the reason high-pressure specialties are dominated by men is women want a family-friendly career, says Day. “We shouldn’t be afraid to discuss reality.”
    Dr. Nancy Poirier is one of the exceptions, but admits she isn’t quite sure how she does it. Between her responsibilities as the head of the pediatric heart transplant program at Sainte-Justine hospital in Montreal and her work in adult cardiac surgery at the Montreal Heart Institute, she puts in 12-hour days and is on call two full weeks out of every month.
    It doesn’t leave much time to spend with her husband and children — a threeyear-old daughter and a five-year-old son.
    Poirier, 42, is one of just a handful of female cardiac surgeons in Canada. She loves her job but she’s not surprised there are so few women like her.
    “It’s hard,” she said in an interview. “I come home and put my children to bed.”
    With the Canadian medical profession as a whole becoming feminized, the lack of female surgeons is yet another element threatening to put pressure on a healthcare system already feeling the strain of a doctor shortage.
    As it is, patients are waiting on average nearly half a year for orthopedic surgery and more than two months for brain surgery, according to a recent Fraser Institute report.
    A lack of female role models is one of the reasons young women aren’t choosing surgery, says Dr. Carol Herbert, dean of the Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Western Ontario.
    A conscious effort to recruit more women to her school’s surgery department has resulted in women making up three-quarters of medical graduates choosing to go on in surgery, but that’s not the norm nationally.
    Certain surgical specialties — such as neurosurgery, cardiac surgery and orthopedics — are particularly difficult to reconcile with family life because they require a lot of emergency work, says Dr. Bryce Taylor, surgeon-in-chief at University Health Network in Toronto.
    It doesn’t help that the training period typically takes at least five years after medical school for a surgeon, compared to just two years for a family doctor. Worse, the training period and its hefty share of on call duty coincides with peak child-bearing years.
    “It’s a big commitment,” says Edmonton orthopedic surgeon Dr. Angela Scharfenberger.
    At 40, Scharfenberger is only just now getting around to thinking about having children — a bit late, she admits.
    According to a 2002 Canadian Medical Association survey, the average female doctor spends 41 hours on child care and 13 hours on household chores each week while male doctors spend just 15 hours on child care and eight hours per week on household tasks.

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  3. Luis Enrique Avatar
    Luis Enrique

    what blew my mind about that article (aside from the sheer insanity of forcing gender equality on academia in the form of equal distributions of students of professors) is that presumably the case is built on the premise that there is no underlying pattern in the distribution of aptitudes and inclinations between the genders (the more nobels more dumbells idea) that could partially* explain distribution of outcomes we observe, yet one of the arguments given that current practice in academia is sexist, is that there is a culture of competition that women don’t like! Er … so are the sexes equal in their inclinations or not?
    * this is quite compatible with the view that there still also exists sexism in the system

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  4. tolkein Avatar
    tolkein

    Is there going to be action to redress the gender imbalance in non-surgical medicine? Nearly 70% of first year medics in Quebec are women, so the gender imbalance is over 2:1. Something should be done! Must be female chauvinism in action.

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  5. DaninVan Avatar
    DaninVan

    tolkein; do you really want a radical feminist surgeon doing YOUR vasectomy?…;)

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