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Gender inequities in academe and faculty perceptions of family-friendly policies

Posted on:2011-10-17Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Southern Illinois University at CarbondaleCandidate:Ramirez, Susan MFull Text:PDF
GTID:1447390002461884Subject:Higher Education
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
This study explored faculty members' perceived importance of family-friendly policies in academia, the extent to which faculty perceive academic institutions as having a social responsibility to make the academy more family-friendly, participants' endorsement of gender-biased norms, and whether the faculty members who participated in this study are considering "opting-out" of academia. Key constructs that were explored include: the ideal worker norm, the motherhood norm, the maternal wall, and bias avoidance. Methodological limitations and the implications for this study were discussed.;The participants of this study were 243 female and male tenure-track and tenured faculty members from graduate departments from six nationally accredited, public, U.S. doctoral-granting research universities. The results indicated that although most faculty do not intend to "opt-out" of academia, a substantial proportion reported that they are considering leaving their current institution, or leaving academia entirely. Further, although faculty members' perceptions of whether a family-friendly policy is of personal importance varied, the overwhelming majority of respondents expressed support for such policies. Finally, on average, faculty members did not endorse gender-biased beliefs toward caregiving, with women being less likely to endorse such beliefs.
Keywords/Search Tags:Faculty, Family-friendly, Academia
PDF Full Text Request
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