Transcript Slide 1

IUPS July 2009
Women in Physiology
We do it our way –
A personal and UK perspective on gender
equality and physiology
Susan Wray
Physiology
Liverpool, UK
On being a female physiologist in the UK
• 1: How good/bad is it?
• 2: What are the issues?
• 3: What can we do?
1: How good/ bad is it?
Universities/institutes
Female physiologists/scientist get appointed and promoted
Female physiologists are
Heads of departments and faculties
Female physiologists/scientists are Vice Chancellors/executives
All universities/institutes have equal opportunity commitment
1: How good/ bad is it?
Professional bodies
Female physiologists on:
grant committees
editorial Boards
society committees
learned bodies
1: How good/ bad is it?
So, no problem?
1: How good/ bad is it?
Universities/institutes
Female physiologists/scientist get appointed and promoted
>50% women graduates, < 10% become professors
professors and mothers.......Rare beasts
Female physiologists are
Heads of departments and faculties
All are first female head and majority of departments
have never had a female head.
Female physiologists/scientists are Vice Chancellors/executive
Female VCs Very Rare beasts!
All universities/institutes have equal opportunity commitment
UK universities have been shown to be amongst worst
institutions for gender equality. Equal opportunity not working
1: How good/ bad is it?
Professional bodies
Female physiologists on BUT:
•grant committees – few and no section heads,
Wellcome Trust physiol committee:
1/15
•editorial Boards - few : J.Physiol & Expt Physiol
never a female chair: JP senior Eds:
0/14
•society committees – few especially on executives
Physiological Society currently
1/6
•learned bodies - very few;
Female Royal Society Fellows
5%
1: How good/ bad is it?
SAD
GRUMPY
Dame Nancy Rothwell, FRS
In UK probably is best “power” role model for physiologists
Deputy President of University of Manchester,
Chairs a Wellcome Trust committee, Council member of BBSRC,
Trustee of Cancer Research UK, Non-executive director of AstraZeneca
Is consulted by government, media , heads bodies etc
Her view: there are no barriers, glass ceilings, just get on with it,
put yourself forward and don’t forget to network.
“But, the one thing worse than a lack of women in senior positions or as fellows of the
Royal Society would be to judge them less exactingly than men: "For God's sake,
you've got to stop short of positive discrimination."
So why aren't there more Nancies?
On being a female physiologist in the UK
• How good/bad is it?
• 2. What are the issues?
• What can we do?
What are the issues?
Women knowing what they want
Science/workplace attitudes
Families
Stereotypes, assumptions and prejudice
and.........
What are the issues?

Women knowing what they want
Life and choices more complex for females
lack of role models
What are the issues?
Science/workplace attitudes
male and female ways of doing things
current set up evolved to suit males and male ways
e.g. questions after talks: for info or ego?
not a real scientist unless you life devoted to it
female way = weak . success = male way
power plays and alpha maleness; not as valued by women?
What are the issues?
Women in Science, Engineering and Technology:
Three Decades of UK Initiatives
Alison Phipps
(Trentham Books: 2008)
“The success of initiatives has been limited by focusing on helping
women to survive and thrive in existing masculine environments,
rather than challenging the underlying work culture and perception
of the ideal scientist as a masculine figure:
rational, competitive, independent and technically skilled”.
What are the issues?
Families
Biggest issue in UK
How to have it all
Need more role models
Interacts with women’s choices, workplace set up
and what is “success”?
What are the issues?

Stereotypes, assumptions and prejudice
Males are safe choice and plenty to pick from
Women good at pastoral roles, teaching, details....
Female wouldn’t want to do it
– she’s too busy already,
parents/children to look after
no experience...... not put herself forward
Struggle in this role/discipline, get pregnant, emotional,
too risky, bitchy, can’t take a joke, never in the bar
(threatens me, may be better than me,
didn’t want to sleep with me, what’s her problem!)
What are the issues?
 and.........
Society, biology, confidence, rewards, and ..........
“We all know talented women who have dropped out of science
from a feeling of "not being good enough" to do research or to
lead a research group.
put this inner voice to rest . Such feelings arise from one's
experience of society, culture and capitalism,
not one's abilities as a scientist”.
Alison Phipps (Trentham Books: 2008
Give up now?!
Scientist
Smiley
• 1: How good/bad is it?
• 2: What are the issues?
• 3: What can we do?
Smiley
in training
What can we do?
A lot
Evaluate and celebrate success – role out role models
Mentor schemes
Do it your way – don’t give up
Be a sister not a b****
What can we do?
Evaluate and celebrate success – role out role models
What is success – you decide
Let people know and spread the word
e.g. Biophysical Society mag profiles
Royal Society booklet about successful women
who are also mothers,
Step up the mark
Volunteer, nominate, initiate, subvert
“Mothers in Science – 64 ways to have it all”
free pdf from RS. Ottoline Leyser: Rosalind Franklin Award
What can we do?
Evaluate and celebrate success – role out role models
What is success – you decide
Let people know and spread the word
e.g. Biophysical Society mag profiles
Royal Society booklet about successful women
who are also mothers,
Step up the mark
Volunteer, nominate, initiate, subvert
L’OREAL - UNESCO
awards
honouring women in science
What can we do?

Mentor schemes
Join in, set up in work place and professional bodies
network
Tap in to existing organizations and expertise
Give money for named lecture, fellowship,
bursary, that favours females
e.g. European
association for women in Science - Witec
INTRANET
Welcome to the website for WiTEC - the European Association for Women in Science, Engineering and
Technology (SET).
WiTEC was formed as a network in 1988 and after more than ten years of networking and project activities
related to women and SET, established itself as a non-profit European association in May 2001.
WiTEC has the following aims at European level:
• To increase the number of girls and women studying SET subjects and to help them progress
.to related careers
• To develop women's technical and entrepreneurial skills through training initiatives and projects
• To create information exchanges and networking opportunities for women in SET
• To promote and support research into areas relating to women in SET
• To support initiatives to promote the Gender Mainstreaming Policy
• To promote regional, national and international awareness and interest in this field.
WISE
women into science, engineering and construction
What can we do?

Mentor schemes
Join in, set up in work place and professional bodies
network
Tap in to existing organizations and expertise
Give money for named lecture, fellowship,
bursary, that favours females
What can we do?

Do it your way – don’t give up
One size doesn’t fit all
Feel the fear – and do it anyway.
(every now and then!)
Illegitimi non carborundum
Sisters are doing it for themselves
What can we do?

Be a sister not a bitch
Don’t perpetuate stereotypes, assumptions and prejudices
Don’t pull the ladder up
Don’t get jealous
– it’s easier now,
let them learn from their mistakes
That could /should have been me, so not helping her
Thanks to all the good guys,
female and male, helping UK and
world physiology by being fair
AND finally
Professor Bridget Lumb, head of Physiology Bristol
and...
Chair of Organising Committee for IUPS 2013
in Birmingham, UK
See you there!