Crippled at the Starting Gate Crippled at the Starting Gate

Crippled at the Starting Gate

The Graduate Schools Created and Perpetuate the Gender Gap in Science and Engineering

    • $67.99
    • $67.99

Publisher Description

In Crippled at the Starting Gate, Robert Leslie Fisher argues that the United States needs an education bill, much like the G.I. Bill passed after World War II, to send more Americans to graduate school in the sciences and engineering. Equally important, the graduate schools need to change their culture not only to recruit more women, African-Americans, and Latinos into science, but to promote them to senior faculty positions.



Accomplishing these changes in university science and engineering departments will be challenging since the institutions have a strong propensity to recruit white males similar to the overwhelmingly white male senior faculty.



In Making Science Fair (2007), Fisher urged new productivity metrics to assure that more women can advance in science. Now Fisher urges ending burdensome educational practices including requiring women and foreign graduate students to teach under-graduates, which adversely affects both the graduate students and the undergraduates.

GENRE
Politics & Current Events
RELEASED
2009
November 16
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
226
Pages
PUBLISHER
University Press of America
SELLER
Bookwire Gesellschaft zum Vertrieb digitaler Medien mbH
SIZE
18.3
MB