Sunday, Sep 27 2020

There is a relationship between the gender gap in STEM careers and sexual harassment in Universities

Original posted by Susana Gomez

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Scientific Articles

  • Aycock, L.M., Hazari, Z., Brewe, E., Clancy, K., Hodapp, T., & Goertzen, R. (2019). Sexual harassment reported by undergraduate female physicists. Physical review physics education research, 15(1) https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.15.010121
  • Leaper, C.& Starr, C. (2018). Helping and Hindering Undergraduate Women’s STEM Motivation: Experiences With STEM Encouragement, STEM-Related Gender Bias, and Sexual Harassment. Psychology of women quarterly, 43(2), 165-183 https://doi.org/10.1177/0361684318806302
  • Ilies, R., Hauserman, N., Schwochau, S., & Stibal, J. (2003). Reported incidence rates of work‐related sexual harassment in the United States: Using meta‐analysis to explain reported rate disparities. Personnel Psychology, 56(3), 607-631. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-6570.2003.tb00752.x

Explanation of the Post

Many universities have recently reported, in the revision of the enrollment rate of women in STEM careers, a decrease in the numbers of enrollments and the consequent increase in the gender gap. This reality occurs despite the increase, on the contrary, of initiatives to encourage and awaken interest and passion for these professional careers. At the same time organizations such as the National Academy of Sciences, denounce the high existence of sexual harassment in STEM disciplines. However, gender-based violence in universities is not yet considered the main factor because of there are fewer women in STEM careers.

Other sources

https://www.lavanguardia.com/vida/20191025/471180523422/solo-un-18-por-ciento-de-los-estudiantes-de-carreras-stem-son-mujeres.htmlhttps://sites.nationalacademies.org/SHSTUDY/SHSTUDY_189062

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1 Comment

  1. Some studies report a correlation between male-dominated fields (such as Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) and sexual harassment, and at the same time, suffering sexual harassment is directly related to lower rates of engagement of female students (Aycock et al., 2019; Leaper & Starr, 2018; Ilies et al., 2003).

    REFERENCES
    Aycock, L.M., Hazari, Z., Brewe, E., Clancy, K., Hodapp, T., & Goertzen, R. (2019). Sexual harassment reported by undergraduate female physicists. Physical review physics education research, 15(1) https://journals-aps-org.sabidi.urv.cat/PRPER/issues/15/1 (JCR Q2 in 2019; Scopus Q2 in 2019) https://www.altmetric.com/details/59354608
    Leaper, C.& Starr, C. (2018). Helping and Hindering Undergraduate Women’s STEM Motivation: Experiences With STEM Encouragement, STEM-Related Gender Bias, and Sexual Harassment. Psychology of women quarterly, 43(2), 165-183 https://journals-sagepub-com.sabidi.urv.cat/doi/full/10.1177/0361684318806302 (JCR Q1 in 2019; Q1 in 2018; Scopus Q1 in 2019 and Q1 in 2018) metrics https://journals-sagepub-com.sabidi.urv.cat/doi/metrics/10.1177/0361684318806302
    Ilies, R., Hauserman, N., Schwochau, S., & Stibal, J. (2003). Reported incidence rates of work‐related sexual harassment in the United States: Using meta‐analysis to explain reported rate disparities. Personnel Psychology, 56(3), 607-631.(JCR Q1 in 2003; Q1 in 2019; SCOPUS Q1 in 2003; Q1 in 2019) https://wiley.altmetric.com/details/2083590

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