Unequal rights
A decade ago, there was obvious discrimination against women in science, with very few women in top faculty positions. In a now-famous 1999 report, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology was the first to publicly acknowledge that women faculty there felt marginalized and that the low proportion of women faculty in the institute's department of sciences — eight percent — had not increased in 20 years.
That number has more than doubled — to 19 percent — but is still a far cry from equal.
There are many people out there who may question women's ability to succeed in science, but gone are the days when they can say this out loud and get away with it. A prime example of this came in 2005, when Larry Summers, then president of Harvard University, was roundly criticized for implying that women are less skilled at math and science. The incident is routinely suggested as the reason for the end of his tenure at Harvard.
But encouraging women in science may not be without its downside. A New York Times article published last month quotes several top women scientists — including autism researcher and zebrafish guru Hazel Sive — who are concerned that affirmative action-type programs give the impression that women are not held to the same standards as their male colleagues are.
Another article published this month describes male students at Yale University chanting, "No means yes!" across the campus, a disturbing illustration that gender discrimination is alive and well.
While I was an active part of the scientific community — through science fairs, undergraduate laboratories and a Ph.D. — my gender never felt relevant. (One memorable exception: As the sole woman in a lab of eight people, I had to point out that the freezer rack had become too heavy for me to lift.)
But what I haven't experienced is the gap that I believe is the hardest to bridge: convincing a panel of mostly male tenured faculty that you are no longer just a young, ambitious postdoctoral fellow, that you are ready to become a professor. I have heard female candidates for entry-level professor positions referred to as 'girls' by male and female faculty, postdocs and graduate students alike.
Partly, this continues to be a problem because at the faculty level, women are still very much the minority. Women don't look like professors when they present at job talks because most of the professors we see are still men.
The few women who do make it must take on the additional responsibility of being role models, whether they want to or not. Although the women scientists who came before us paved the way, their work isn't quite done yet.





Comments
Autism Report a Fraud
The British Medical Journal, which is highly regarded in the medical field, has declared the 1998 report of British reseracher, Andrew Wakefield, that led to the "Childhood vaccines cause autism movement" was deliberately based on fake data. Further, the report was based on only 12 children. After reviewing Dr. Wakefield’s practices related to the report, a high-level medical group,found him guilty of dishonesty and misconduct. Therefore, there is no scientific proof that autism results from childhood vaccination.
However, since the cause of autism is still unknown, scientists and the medical community must continue to actively search for the cause since some parents still believe in Dr. Wakefield’s report, and their distrust of childhood vaccination needs to end as soon as possible, especially among minority parents because childhood immunization rates are lower in inner-city African American and Hispanic children than in White children.
Dr. Renee Jenkins, the first African American President of the American Academy of Pediatrics, urges parents to vaccinate their children because “we do not want to become a nation of people who are vulnerable to diseases that are deadly”. Information on recommended childhood vaccinations can be obtained from your local health department, your pediatrician, or from the American Academy of Pediatrics.
A summary of childhood vaccination rates by race and ethnicity is located in our Health Trends Section, and basic information on autism is just one click away.
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