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Professor Surveys Physics Faculty Makeup
The 50 universities surveyed have a total of 1987 physics faculty members. The full data can be viewed online at http://www.awis.org/statistics/physicsTable.html. Here are some highlights:
"Nelson's data agree pretty well with ours," says Rachel Ivie of the American Institute of Physics's statistics division. (AIP's most recent report on employment by gender and race, 2000 Physics Academic Workforce Report, is available on the Web at http://www.aip.org/statistics/trends/reports/awf01.pdf.) "What Nelson has that we don't is women by race and the breakdown by rank," says Ivie. Most black academic physicists are at historically black colleges and universities, Ivie adds. "The question is, Why are they there? Are they not going to the top 50 universities because they don't get offers, or because they choose not to? I don't think anyone knows the answer." Nelson, who is one quarter Native American, started doing her own surveys after seeing one that showed the breakdown of chemistry faculty by gender and wondering why it didn't look at minorities. She compiled the data by sending out questionnaires and then following up aggressively. When universities didn't respond, she says, "We got the information from the Web and from talking to people in the department. That's how we got a 100% response rate." Physics, she adds, "is doing a pretty good job in using the available female base, but it lags in hiring minorities." One surprising result, Nelson says, is that chemical engineering outstrips both chemistry and physics in hiring from their respective pools of African American PhDs. "My students were extremely interested in the surveys," says Nelson. "I think the females have been taught they will have a full chance, and they expect it. And when they see this sort of statistics, they are even more outraged than professors. All I am asking is for people to listen--and not to punish females and minorities when they try to discuss the disincentives for going into these fields."
Toni Feder
© 2001 American Institute of Physics
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