Completed
Topics
Women in academic scientific, engineering, and medical (SEM) fields face a myriad of systemic inequities that contribute to significant underrepresentation and disproportionate hardship, challenges amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent changes to higher education. This project will identify the impact of the pandemic on the research careers of women in SEM, including:
- Whether ongoing interventions help or harm women in academic research;
- If these interventions impact women and men differently;
- What unique challenges are women in academic research facing in light of COVID-19; and
- How these elements may impact the research careers of women in SEM.
Featured publication
Consensus
ยท2021
The spring of 2020 marked a change in how almost everyone conducted their personal and professional lives, both within science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and medicine (STEMM) and beyond. The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted global scientific conferences and individual laboratories and require...
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Description
An ad hoc committee of The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine will undertake a fast-track study focused on early indicators of the potential impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the careers of women in academic science, engineering, and medicine (STEMM). Building on the information and data in the recent NASEM report, Promising Practices for Addressing the Underrepresentation of Women in STEMM, the committee will commission research papers to identify and analyze disruptions experienced by women in STEMM academic careers during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. It will also hold a public workshop and conduct its own analyses on the ways in which COVID-19 is amplifying the disruptions encountered by women in STEMM academic careers, such as those related to child and family caregiving responsibilities. Based on the commissioned papers, workshop presentations, and its own analyses, the committee will issue a consensus report with findings that reflect what has been learned through its work as well as recommendations for further study and investigation.
Collaborators
Committee
Chair
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Staff Officer
Sponsors
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Doris Duke Foundation
National Institute of Standards and Technology
National Institutes of Health
National Science Foundation
Staff
Rian Lund Dahlberg
Lead
Jeena M. Thomas
Arielle Baker
Imani Braxton-Allen
Thomas Rudin
Major units and sub-units
Policy and Global Affairs
Lead
Center for Advancing Science and Technology
Lead
Committee on Women in Science, Engineering, and Medicine
Lead
U.S. Science and Innovation Policy
Lead
Board on Higher Education and Workforce
Lead
Science and Engineering Education and Workforce Program Area
Lead