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IoPP onscreen PowerPoint slides

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Wrote to each department in the UK and Ireland (copied to the VC) ... Using good practice guides ( e.g. RCUK Research staff concordat) Department site visits ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IoPP onscreen PowerPoint slides


1
Women in University Science Departments
Peter MainDirector, Education and Science, IOP
Gender Equality Event UCL18th March
2008 peter.main_at_iop.org, www.iop.org
2
Plan of Talk
  • Diversity Programme
  • Site Visit Scheme
  • JUNO Code of Practice
  • Working with other organisations

3


Diversity Programme

4
Diversity Programme
  • 1.5 FTE staff
  • Katharine Hollinshead Programme Leader
  • Saher Ahmed Programme Coordinator
  • Examples of Activities
  • Career breaks guidance
  • Women in university physics departments report
  • Diversity in HE (with the RSC)
  • Best practice guide on Disability

5
Physics nationally
6
Physics nationally
7
Physics nationally
8


Site Visit Scheme

9
Background
  • Wrote to each department in the UK and Ireland
    (copied to the VC)
  • Visits by invitation only and there was no charge
  • Visited 17 (out of 46) physics departments in
    all.

10
The Visit
  • Paperwork (sent beforehand) included admissions
    statistics, gender disaggregated student numbers,
    pass rates, staff handbook etc.
  • Meeting with departmental management , admissions
    tutor, director of teaching, HR representative
    etc
  • Meetings with
  • Female academic staff (where none, women staff
    from cognate subjects)
  • Male academic staff
  • Female RAs and PGs
  • Male RAs and PGs

11
The Visit
  • Lunch with female UGs. No staff were present
  • Laboratory tour
  • Informal feedback at the end from the chair of
    the panel to the HoD
  • Confidential written report is sent to HoD with
    recommendations.

12
Observations
  • Women underrepresented in seminars and colloquia
  • Most departments were not monitoring statistics
  • Departments without women suffer in many ways (eg
    admissions, role models). Male staff are usually
    aware of this but are very reluctant to do
    anything about it.
  • The fact that the visit took place meant that
    gender issues were discussed, perhaps for the
    first time.
  • Situation on the ground is often very different
    from what management believe.

13
The Best Departments
  • Sympathetic Head of Department (they were all
    male). In some cases, it was clear that former
    HoDs had been very biased.
  • Male participation in family-friendly policies.
    If they did not, women felt they were perceived
    as letting the side down by, for example,
    taking maternity leave or fitting their hours
    around the nursery.
  • A high fraction of young staff. Young fathers
    appreciate the problems but younger men are
    generally more sensitive to gender issues.

14
The Best Departments
  • Women involved in senior management. But women
    were often disinclined to get involved because
    they found the prevailing attitudes so
    unpleasant.
  • Strong, informal social networks for women. (In
    some places found that men had unconsciously
    created an uncomfortable atmosphere by being so
    friendly among themselves).

15
Important Issues
  • Formal, transparent procedures at all levels.
  • Recruitment (no secret discussions, women on
    interview panels)
  • Promotion (major issue)
  • Appraisal (particularly for RAs)
  • Workload allocation
  • Women on serious committees
  • Career breaks

16
Important Issues
  • Even successful female RAs and PGs did not want
    an academic career
  • Not consistent with starting a family
  • Average age of academic appointment is 35.
  • Effect of multiple short term contacts
  • Lack of a well-defined career structure
  • Lack of good careers advice
  • Lack of role models
  • Long hours culture

17
Important Issues
  • Childcare facilities were usually thought to be
    inadequate and, where they were good, did not
    have enough places. The best matched their hours
    to those of the university.
  • Harassment. Although almost every place had a
    procedure for dealing with harassment, the panels
    were told of several cases, almost none of which
    had been dealt with in a satisfactory manner.

18

General Report
  • General report highlighting the issues and
    disseminating good practice has been published
  • Created a lot of interest amongst other learned
    societies

19


JUNO Code of Practice

20

JUNO Code of Practice Principles
  • A robust organisational framework to deliver
    equality of opportunity and reward.
  • Appointment, promotion and selection processes
    and procedures that encourage men and women to
    apply for academic posts at all levels.
  • Departmental structures and systems which support
    and encourage the career progression of all staff
    and enable men and women to progress and continue
    in their careers.

21

JUNO Code of Practice Principles
  • A departmental organisation, structure,
    management arrangements and culture that are
    open, inclusive and transparent and encourage the
    participation of all staff.
  • Flexible approaches and provisions that
    encompass, the working day, the working year and
    a working life in SET and enable individuals, at
    all career and life stages, to maximise their
    contribution to SET, their department and
    institution.

22
Two levels of engagement
  • Supporter
  • Physics department endorsing the 5 principles
    set out in the Code of Practice
  • Champion
  • Physics departments confirmed as meeting the 5
    principles set out in the Code of Practice
  • Launched June 14th 2007

23


Working with other organisations

24

SPIDER
  • STEM Professional Institutions Diversity and
    Equality Resources
  • Core members IOP, RSC, RAEng RCUK (sec)
  • Four strands
  • HE and research institutes
  • Business private and public sector
  • Professional bodies internal organisation
  • Public engagement

25

SPIDER HE and Research Institutes
  • Athena Partnership IOP, RSC and UKRC
  • Promoting resources and activities
  • Benchmarking and checklists
  • Using good practice guides ( e.g. RCUK Research
    staff concordat)
  • Department site visits
  • ASSET Survey
  • JUNO
  • SWAN awards
  • Enabling other professional societies to get
    involved

26

Virtuous cycle
27


Promoting physics, supporting physicists
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