Today’s advice comes
from Nancy Brickhouse, the Senior Science Advisor at the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics and a member of the AAS
council. Her research interests include solar and stellar coronal physics,
plasma spectral modeling, atomic data for astrophysics, UV to X-ray
spectroscopy of diverse objects, and physical processes in astrophysical
plasmas. She is a leader of the ATOMDB Project, which uses collisional and
radiative atomic data to generate spectral models needed for high-energy
astrophysics.
How do SOC members
ensure an appropriate level of diversity among conference invited speakers if
the committee chair does not provide leadership? Here are some suggestions.
•When asked to serve on
a SOC, make sure you understand the ground rules at the beginning.
•Ask what the schedule
for decision-making is, and make sure there is enough time to think through
issues of balance; put the schedule on your calendar and check with the SOC
chair if you haven't heard back by the date promised.
•Make sure that you have
time to participate fully.
•Insist that the full
SOC will be allowed to review the program before a final decision is made.
•Make sure the committee
as a whole considers speaker diversity along all relevant axes: subfields
within the scope of the conference, senior vs junior, gender, racial/ethnic,
institutional, national/international. This is a good discussion to have with
the full SOC before coming up with speaker suggestions. Ask the organizers what
their goals are for achieving diversity.
•If you are not
satisfied that the organizers plan to ensure diversity (if they respond
"we just want the best speakers") consider declining to serve.
•It's appropriate for
the SOC to recruit people to submit contributed talks for consideration.
•Remind SOC members of
the CSWA website that indicates the % of women invited speakers at various
meetings; and other surveys/statistics (AIP, for example) that demonstrate the
availability of good women speakers.
•The CSWA statistics can
be used to help set diversity goals for meetings; in subfields where the
demographics are significantly different from astronomy/astrophysics in
general, it may be more reasonable to set goals based on subfield statistics,
if known.
•Imagine sitting in the
audience "to be" and noting whether the speaker demographics match
the audience demographics. Make sure you are happy with the draft speaker
demographics.
•Following up on this
last suggestion, revisit the comparison once you are at the meeting. How close
were the imagined audience demographics to the actuals? This exercise will
inform you when you serve on your next SOC.
Contributions from
Andrea Dupree, Caty Pilachowski, Roberta Humphreys, Lee Anne Willson, and Lynne
Hillenbrand are greatly appreciated.
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