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Continuing to think on my post on the recent New York Times article on women in science and responses to it by women scientists, I quickly emailed a tenured geoscience professor friend asking her opinions on the topic. A pioneer in her field of study, this professor is also very active in professional societies as well as encouraging women in the sciences.

She pointed me to the following articles for further reading:

American Association of University Women | Why So Few (2010)

American Geological Insititute | Participation of Women in Geoscience Occupations (May 14, 2010)

American Geological Insititute | Trends in Geoscience Degrees Conferred to Women (November 23, 2009)

and had this to say:

“Those of us hired in the 70s and 80s don’t seem to have provided a lot of examples of combining a successful academic career with children. And I think that despite spousal hiring policies, halting of the tenure track for childbirth, etc., it remains more difficult for women faculty in the tenure track to sustain or develop relationships, bear and raise children, and generally maintain some sense of balance in their lives.

“… I also think there are still significant “cultural” aspects of physical science and engineering departments that make them feel less comfortable to some women students (competitiveness, “macho” displays, few women faculty, male faculty who consciously or unconsciously put women down). The enrollment numbers from AGI suggest that the geosciences have made some significant improvements in the last decade, but the total numbers of students in geoscience are much lower than in life science, so there may be some significant noise in the observed trends.”

If you know of any other must-read studies and articles on women in science and engineering or the current state of science and technology education in general, please alert me in the comments.

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Roundup

Which I used on the large prickly weeds last evening because I was so sick of having to dig the replicating f**kers out every single day and almost hosed my foot down with the stuff and worried that my kids will be born with their livers outside their bodies and …

Anyway, on with the links.

Earth Magazine | Geologists to be charged for not predicting earthquake? Italy, slow on the science uptake since the early 17th century.

BP To Create $20 Billion Fund For Claims On Day 59 of the still-gushing oil volcano, how can this, a partial repayment by a private company to the United States for the horrible damage wreaked on the Gulf Coast’s waters, land, people, jobs and pysche, in any way be referred to as a “bailout” or “redistribution of wealth?” How in the world is Rep. Joe Barton (R-TX) “ashamed” of granting the money to victims? I thought one of the most basic tenets of capitalism is You Break It, You Bought It. As Stinque says, “Anyone responsible, civilly or criminally, should be bankrupted and banished from polite society.”

“The Douche Doesn’t Fall Far From The Bag” The starred comments on this Gawker post about Griffith Rutherford Harsh V, son of Meg Whitman and Exhibit A for supporters of the estate tax, are comedy gold.

Heehaw Marketing | The Cultural Tour Bus “Even with a Budweiser sized budget, it’s just not possible to immerse a team in someone else“s world enough. A single insight doesn’t really give us much understanding at all. And really, with the surface level nonsense most are doing, we“re usually just pecking at observational scraps rather than reaching for some perceptive nirvana.” The article references an interview with David Simon about the Average Reader.

McSweeney | I’m Comic Sans, A**hole “We don’t all have seventy-three weights of stick-up-my-ass Helvetica sitting on our seventeen-inch MacBook Pros. Sorry the entire world can’t all be done in stark Eurotrash Swiss type. Sorry some people like to have fun.”

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Wired | BP“s ˜Nightmare“ Well: Internal Documents Uncover Negligence

In addition to BP“s decision not to use a liner, the committee’s letter describes four other examples of risky negligence.

Five big corners were cut. Wow.

They weren’t kidding about the MC252 well being a nightmare. The ship that was collecting oil via the LMRP caught fire, presumably due to lightning. Collection operations have been suspended until they get this latest development sorted out. What next? I’m trying very hard not to let the word “snake bit” enter my vernacular.

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Tweet of the day from @TheOilDrum: “As we said weeks ago, BP should run this like Mission Control @NASA – not like an exclusive country club function.”

* Now following WDSU reporter Scott Walker’s blog. He verifies (with video proof) that media presence is deterred at clean-up sites by “security” despite orders to the contrary from above:

Today we visited Grand Isle beach to check on things there and one thing stuck out. Too many chefs in the kitchen. Just yesterday, BP CEO Doug Suttles said cleanup workers were free to talk to the media. He basically said all the instances of reporters being hassled was a misunderstanding. Today I asked the private security guard at the beach if I could talk to the workers. He said no and those were his orders, given to him by his boss.

* Keep at it with the oiled-bird cleanup and support for it, despite those who promote their own ethics through junk science. (Not to mention the poster and commenters who argue for bird euthanasia because clean birds make BP look good and help sell Dawn detergent. That’s messed up, y’all.) Read the International Bird Rescue Research Center’s report on the post-release survival of oil-affected seabirds. “Birds can be successfully rehabilitated and returned to the wild, where many survive for years and breed.” And AND even if a small percentage of the gene pool is all that ends up making it, the cleanup efforts are worth it. We have to have tried.

A friend spends her Mondays as a bird cleanup volunteer down in Plaquemines Parish. There is nothing more in the world I would like to be doing right now, but all I can do from here is cough up the dough to help keep them going and encourage you to volunteer and donate as well.

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Maggie Koerth-Baker of BoingBoing has compiled four excellent responses to John Tierney’s two-parter for the New York Times on women in science. The response pieces are written by – wait for it – women in science. I encourage you to read all of these well-argued perspectives.

As a female scientist myself, I’m puzzled at society’s state of puzzlement over this “debate.” The following things are so glaringly obvious that I’m surprised no one has acted on them:

1) With only 25% of our high-school graduates fit to enter college, the workforce or the military, America is decelerating its emphasis on educational supremacy, leave alone promoting women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). And, among developed nations, only in America does the separation into gender roles start at such an early, impressionable age. So, not only are American students screwed, female American students are screwed worse. Leveling the playing field of gender at the university level is admirable but not a permanent fix given ingrained biases at that age; start at the community and elementary level, with clear incentives drawn and labeled from the start as well as parental buy-in.

2) The idea of preparing students for standardized tests as educational recovery policy is ludicrous on the parts of both the Bush and Obama administrations. How does a society foster critical thinkers by inflating grades but not necessary skills? Furthermore, women and men do not perform the same on standardized tests (lots of my female friends and relatives and I suck at them, whereas my non-scientist husband can take an MCAT or GRE without studying because he out-psychs the tests), a male or a female can excel at standardized testing but show no STEM aptitude or original research skills and there is a lot more to STEM research than kicking ass at standardized tests. As Dr. Carolyn Porco responds, “I’ve known males whose analytical abilities were off the charts”the ones on the extreme end of the curve that we are now discussing”but who just couldn’t cut it in the world of scientific research, because they lacked some important personality trait.” There isn’t one way to think or to solve real-world problems.

3) As a graduate of a geology department that hires good professors regardless of gender, I’ve noticed that there is no shortage of excellent female candidates in any subdiscipline. So, why are fewer women hired into academia than men? Do men enjoy a larger incentive to go into the STEM disciplines than women (other than a pre-conditioned social approval)? I don’t know, but it’s an anomaly worth investigating.

4) Again with the incentives. I believe that even if we make astrophysics, structural engineering and neurobiology PhDs out of all of our children, there is no readily-apparent career payout. Where are the attractive STEM research jobs?

If the nation truly wants its ablest students to become scientists, it must undertake reforms ” but not of the schools. Instead, it must reconstruct a career structure that will once again provide young Americans the reasonable hope that spending their youth preparing to do science will provide a satisfactory career.

… Many young Americans bright enough to do the math therefore conclude that instead of gambling 12 years on the small chance of becoming an assistant professor, they can invest that time in becoming a neurosurgeon, or a quarter of it in becoming a lawyer or a sixth in earning an MBA. And many who do earn doctorates in math-based subjects opt to use their skills devising mathematical models on Wall Street, rather than solving scientific puzzles in university labs, hoping a professorship opens up.

I finished graduate school when I was 28 and, since then, have been so focused on the career for which I went through all that schooling that I am still childless. And I’m not even an academic! How many women today want to deal with 60+ hours of post-doctoral research a week at low pay when they can make twice as much in non-science fields and get home to the kids by dinner? Besides, many of us are about maximizing payoff and minimizing uncertainty. Modern STEM graduate school does not deliver.

5) This is not to discourage women from attaining PhDs and working towards achievement and notoriety, but to point out that a balance between academic work and home life has become virtually unachievable for women thanks to social constructs (see Point 1). Dr. Isis has the best overall reaction to Tierney’s article from which this point stands out:

We can spend our time discussing SAT scores, but I worry that we are missing the most important thing that keeps women out of science – the cultural attitudes that teach women that if they choose a demanding career, they aren’t fulfilling their duties as wife and mother.

6) Raise the pay for teachers so that it doesn’t end up being a garbage receptacle of a job, hence devaluing the work of proficient teachers who want to be there. The big joke when I was in university was ‘Those who can’t do, teach.” How sad. As an example, the female students in my undergraduate geology curriculum who couldn’t maintain a C-average ended up switching to Education’s science teaching curriculum. These are the people teaching our kids! And why is teaching as a profession encouraged more in women than in men?

After all these years, the following observations ought to have slapped us repeatedly into the light, into directed action. But we act astounded when these results come out in modern studies. Why?

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