Transcript Document

The ADVANCE Program: Promoting Women’s
Careers in Science and Engineering
A National Science Foundation Institutional Transformation Award
Barbara Silver1
Leanne Mauriello2
Helen Mederer1
Lisa L. Harlow1
1University
1Pro-Change
of Rhode Island
Behavior Systems
Presented at 2007 Annual Meeting of the New England Psychological Association
Western Connecticut State University, October 20, 2007
Supported in part by NSF Institutional Transformation Award SBE-0245039
Less access to
resources
Fewer professional
networks
Fewer
collaborations
Less mentoring
“Ideal worker”
norm
Women in
STEM
experience . .
Fewer social
networks
Burden of token
status
Stereotyped
work expectations
Chilly work
environment
Resulting in:
Isolation and exclusion
Heavier workloads
More challenges balancing work and family
“Bias avoidance” behaviors
Salary and promotion lags
Less career satisfaction
Higher attrition
More part-time, non-tenure line work
National Science Foundation
ADVANCE Program
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Launched 2001
87 awards to date (another round 2008)
> $90 million
Various levels of awards
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Institutional Transformation Grants
Fellows Awards
Leadership Grants
PAID (Partnership, Adaptation, Implementation, Dissemination)
Grants
• Expanding criteria for future awards
– Broader range of institutions
– Wider target population
URI ADVANCE PROGRAM GOALS
Develop & Share a Comprehensive
Understanding of the Status of Women
STEM Faculty
Evaluation
Increase the Number of Ranked Women
STEM Faculty
Recruitment
Advance the Careers of Women STEM
Faculty
Faculty Development
Improve Available Networks of Support,
Especially for Women STEM Faculty
Work-Life-Family
Promote Organizational Change in
Collaboration with University Leaders
Climate Change
Program
Components
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Faculty Fellows Program
Recruitment
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Supplemental Start-up Funding
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Best Search Practices Training
Faculty
Development
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Incentive “mini-grant” Fund
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Topical Lunches
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Career Workshops
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Mentoring Program
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Parental Leave Policy
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Dual Career Hiring Program
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Creation of a Work-Life-Family
Center
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Lactation sites, flexible work
policies, & other initiatives
Work-Life
Initiatives
Evaluation
Climate Change
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Academic Work Environment
Survey (pre and post)
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Benchmark Data Collection
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Program Evaluation
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Dissemination
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Internal Advisory Action Council
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Department Climate Workshops
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Public Events, Workshops,
Literature, Manuals, etc.
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Chairs’ Discussion Forum
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Integrated Theoretical Model for
Climate Change
Successes . . .
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STEM recruitment now > 50% female
Best practices for all searches
New ad language required
Formal Faculty Mentor Program
Topical Lunches to continue
Dual Career Policy approved
Incentive Fund absorbed
Paid Parental Leave Policy in place
Lactation sites approved
Work-Life Center planned
ADVANCE Center approved
Inclusion in President’s 2006-2009 Strategic Plan
Many reports of warmer climate, more support, more networking,
etc., etc.
How does change occur? The traditional model:
Top Down
(Formal policy change,
administrative leadership)
Climate Change
or
“Institutional Transformation”
Bottom Up
(Individual, grass roots)
Top Down
Social Interaction
Bottom Up
Recruitment Program - $$
Parental Leave Policy
Lactation site established
Mentoring Program
Acknowledging all comments in meetings
Scheduling meetings when all can attend
Offering to cover classes during leaves
Inviting new woman faculty to lunch
Openly discussing family responsibilities
Collaborating on grants
Encouraging use of leave policies
Joining a diversity committee
Personal endorsements or complaints
Attending workshops
Talking about equity issues with colleagues
3-Level Structural Model
INTERACTIONAL
INSTITUTIONAL
Are administrative offices
in support of adequate leave
options for parents?
Do Chairs, HR, etc., offer information and
help proactively?
Does a culture of coverage exist
among colleagues?
INDIVIDUAL
PARENTAL LEAVE
Are parents using the policy openly
and without fear of
negative repercussions?
Do non-parents endorse the policy?
Creating an Integrated Change Model
Strategies for change
A vehicle for change
Change at all levels
Transtheoretical
Model
People change when
they are ready to
Appreciative Inquiry
Choosing the positive as
the focus of inquiry
3-Level Structural
Model
Meeting institutions and
individuals in the middle
Successful climate change
is a strategic process
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Approach change from a variety of levels
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Individual
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Interactional
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Highlight key behaviors identified by colleagues – make it personal (dramatic relief)
Ensure equity issues regularly appear on all agendas (stimulus control)
Identify subtle behavioral contributions or deterents to a healthy climate (reinforcement management)
Institutional
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How does this benefit me, my department? (self- and environmental re-evaluation)
Accrue large cadre of individual supporters and liaisons (self-liberation)
Increase awareness and personal connections to issues – (consciousness raising)
Support from Leadership crucial (self- and social liberation)
Commitment of funds and policy changes
Interact with potential change agents at their level of readiness to engage
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Precontemplation & Contemplation
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Preparation & Action
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Awareness building  talks, lunches, workshops, meetings, literature
Stress Universal Benefits - “A Rising Tide Lifts All Boats”
Stress Pecuniary benefits - $$$, grants, retention, etc.
Obtain and widely advertise public, formal endorsements from administration
Celebrate, reward, acknowledge all forward movement
Collect data and show results often
Secure commitments for institutional funding
Maintenance
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Ensure institutionalization – permanence of initiatives through policy change, mainstreaming of
initiatives in culture, permanent committees, etc.