RIT to address advancement for female faculty

Project awards are part of the university’s ADVANCE initiative to enhance opportunities for women faculty in STEM disciplines

Marjolein van der Meulen “lived the statistics” of being one of only a handful of women in her engineering department. It is a similar situation in which women in academia, particularly those in STEM fields—science, technology, engineering and mathematics—find themselves.

The professor of biomedical engineering at Cornell University shared the university’s strategy to improve those odds through its ADVANCE institutional transformation grant, the National Science Foundation’s initiative to enhance recruitment, retention and advancement opportunities for women faculty in STEM disciplines.

RIT was awarded $3.5 million last year from the NSF for its ADVANCE institutional transformation grant, “Connect: Increasing the Representation and Advancement of Women Faculty at RIT.” The grant team launched its program formally on Feb. 13 during a campus ceremony.

During her keynote address at the launch, van der Meulen, who served as one of the principal investigators for Cornell’s ADVANCE effort, provided encouragement and information about what to expect as RIT looks to increase the representation and advancement of female faculty at the university through professional development programing, networking, mentoring and policy review.

“Many of us are the first in our departments or the first promoted, you name it. ADVANCE launched processes at Cornell that are still ongoing today. It helped to develop a more active community of women faculty and reached the formerly unreachable,” said van der Meulen. “The project brought women faculty together, gave us a voice and one that was unified but not necessarily uniform, but a voice nonetheless.”

RIT’s program launch also served to recognize faculty receiving grants through ADVANCE RIT to support leadership and career development for tenured and tenure track faculty at the university. The awardees and their projects are:

B. Thomas Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences

Carol Romanowski, “Peer-to-Peer Mentoring,” Group, Project group members: Sumita Mishra, Yin Pan, Xumin Liu

College of Imaging Arts and Science

Cathleen Ashworth, “Iroquois Creation Story Film and Animation Project,” Project group member: S. Atia Quadri

College of Liberal Arts

Evelyn Brister, “Gendered Citation Disparities in Philosophy of Science”

M. Ann Howard, “Application of the Appreciative Inquiry Process in the College of Liberal Arts,” Project group members: Deborah Blizzard, Caroline DeLong, Lisa Hermsen and Corinna Schlombs

Patrick Scanlon, “Post-Tenure Mentoring”

College of Science

Lea Vacca Michel, “WISe Networking and Leadership Initiatives,” Project group member: Kara Maki

Kate Gleason College of Engineering

Behnaz Ghoraani, “Support Successful Research Proposal Re-submission Efforts for External Funding”

National Technical Institute for the Deaf

Deirdre Schlehofer, “Effective Mentoring and Leadership Skills for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Women Faculty at NTID/RIT,” Project group members: Annemarie Ross, Karen Beiter

“We have so many wonderful, successful women at RIT. They are great scholars, teachers and involved in service leadership capacities across campus,” said RIT President Bill Destler. “ADVANCE is not about fixing them, or fixing women in general. It’s about examining and trying to remedy inequities, such as unfair demands, lack of support structures, in the institutional setting. And it’s not an issue we’ve had all to ourselves at RIT. Here is an opportunity for RIT to be a leader in coming up with new strategies to change.”

Findings from RIT’s NSF ADVANCE IT-Catalyst funded self-study indicated that RIT had only 23 percent of its female tenured and tenure track faculty in STEM disciplines, below the 30 percent average represented in U.S. colleges and universities, even though the number of female faculty had tripled at RIT over a 15-year period. Further data revealed gender-based, average salary gaps existed at each faculty rank, and that women left the faculty ranks at a rate nearly twice that of their male colleagues. These findings mirrored national trends for women in STEM careers in academia and in industry.

RIT is the only university to receive both the ADVANCE Institutional Transformation and ADVANCE IT-Catalyst grants. In 2008, RIT’s research group began the institutional transformation process through EFFORT@RIT to quantify core data that would become the basis for the current ADVANCE RIT project. It is a five-year effort intended to enhance recruitment, retention and advancement opportunities for women faculty in STEM disciplines, as well as in key sub-populations of women of color and deaf and hard-of-hearing women faculty.

Like RIT, Cornell’s process was data-driven and the information provided the foundation for improvements, said van der Meulen. “Tracking numbers will reveal unexpected weaknesses, but in addition to weaknesses, the numbers will also show your strengths. There are things you never expected. Some are depressing, but some are exhilarating, and all are really important.”

Note: RIT’s ADVANCE team includes Margaret Bailey, principal investigator and professor, Kate Gleason College of Engineering; co-principal investigators, Carol Marchetti, associate professor, College of Science; Maureen Valentine, associate dean, College of Applied Science and Technology; Sharon Mason, associate professor, B. Thomas Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences; Kijana Crawford, associate professor, College of Liberal Arts; Susan Foster, professor, National Technical Institute for the Deaf; and Laurie Clayton, ADVANCE program director.

Person posing for cameraMarjolein van der Meulen

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