Challenges of female scientists explored in new essay collection

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Emily Monosson and Stefi Baum, director of RIT’s Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science, collaborate on Motherhood, the Elephant in the Laboratory: Women Scientists Speak Out

No one talks about it much, but if you’re a woman scientist, you’re faced with it every day: the challenge of being a serious scientist and an ideal mother. Those who haven’t made the choice must decide what they can live with: foregoing motherhood for a career in science or a career in science instead of motherhood, or finding a way to meld the two.

Motherhood, the Elephant in the Laboratory: Women Scientists Speak Out, edited by Emily Monosson and published by ILR Press, is a collection of 34 essays by mother-scientists who share their stories and insights on achieving balance and defining success.

RIT scientist Stefi Baum contributed her insights in the essay, “The Accidental Astronomer,” detailing the career and family choices she made at the outset of her career in the 1980s.

Baum is the director of RIT’s Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science and co-chair of the new Astrophysical Sciences and Technology graduate program. She has balanced a successful career inside and outside academia with the domestic demands of being the mother of four children.

In her essay, Baum reflects on timing her pregnancies “so as not to be visibly pregnant” during her early job interviews; giving birth to her first child in a small village in Holland while on a joint post-doctoral fellowship with her husband at the Netherlands Foundation for Radio Astronomy; and returning to work only one week after having had her first son.

“Critical to being able to juggle a scientific career and a young family was having the perfect collaborator—a husband who shared all aspects with me from scientific discovery to baby trips to the doctor,” Baum says. Her husband, Chris O’Dea, is also an astronomer and a professor of physics at RIT.

As director of the Center for Imaging Science, Baum has sought ways to increase the representation of girls in science and women in academia. She started a series of annual programs with the Girl Scouts of Genesee Valley through the center. Baum is also working with Margaret Bailey, Kate Gleason Endowed Chair and associate professor of mechanical engineering, who won a National Science Foundation grant to increase the participation and advancement of women in academic science and engineering careers.

She also headed the engineering division supporting the Hubble ground systems and supervised 140 engineers, scientists and support staff.

In addition, Baum led the team working on a new instrument to be placed on Hubble called the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph. Baum and her husband took the family to Cape Canaveral, Fla., to watch the launch of the shuttle carrying the instrument Baum helped develop.

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