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Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Allison Kasic :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Coming Academic Title Wave
by Allison Kasic
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If the October 17th House hearing is any indication, a full-scale assault on the academy is coming. The target: STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) fields. The charge: wide scale discrimination against women.

Witnesses, Congressmen, and a crowd of over 100 people gathered last Wednesday on Capitol Hill for a hearing on women in academic science and engineering. No Committee Member or panelist challenged the presumption behind the hearing—that discrimination is the primary cause of women’s underrepresentation among science and engineering academics—they turned right to consideration of government-mandated solutions to the perceived problem.

Several panelists, including former Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala, spoke of the need for massive “institutional transformation.” Chairman Brian Baird (D-WA) asked what sort of “hammer” the government could use to enforce this transformation. A popular answer was Title IX.

Normally associated with gender equity in athletics, Title IX (and the strict gender quotas that come along with it) could also be used to increase female participation in STEM fields. Rep. Vernon Ehlers (R-MI), the ranking Republican on the subcommittee, went so far as to joke that the sciences should be designated as a sport. This would have two advantages: “NCAA rules would apply” and the sciences would “share in the football revenues.”

Shalala complained that, as a university president, she hears from a variety of government agencies and organizations about gender equity in sports, but rarely hears anything about gender equity in science. She went on to stress the need for an organization similar to the NCAA to hold schools accountable for Title IX enforcement.

Another way to force change is pulling Congressional purse strings. The message from panelists was loud and clear: money talks and the government should leverage its funds to “ensure results.”

Gretchen Ritter from the University of Texas at Austin also envisioned university provosts holding STEM department chairs accountable for their hiring practices with strict financial consequences, such as a year-long hiring freeze. Translation: hire more women or else. Continued...

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About The Author
Allison Kasic is the director of R. Gaull Silberman Center for Collegiate Studies at the Independent Women's Forum.
 
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Subject: What do some women want?

Ok, we male chauvinists open the door to more women in STEM--kind of an affirmative action where their feminist counselors drag them into it to even the score--and what will these women find?

They will have some nice Indian or Chinese men to work with, for we are graduating fewer and fewer AMERICAN MEN in those fields and import many more from other countries.

Have fun ladies until you whine about the next thing...and hats off to Camilla Outlaw who blogged earlier and who is a women in STEM doing very well--and the kind of woman real men probably like working around.

Forgive me for not reading...
the column, but they are TIDAL waves - not title waves, unless you meant this as a clever play-of-words! Again, forgive me for being too lazy to read your column.
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