You may have heard the
"On Point" news article on May 12 on public radio about men vs women
college graduation rates. The
basic point was that the percentage of men receiving college degrees in the US is
less than 50% and falling. This
made me think about the effect on astronomy.
First, here are the
college numbers. The Census Bureau
reported that 685,000 men and 916,000 women graduated from college in 2009, or 43%
men and 57% women. The numbers for
men have been flat since 1980, while women are steadily rising. The radio show was focused on the
stagnation in the male graduation rates and what can be done about it.
I considered a different angle: will women
soon have equal numbers to men in astronomy departments? That would be a positive development from our CSWA (Committee
for the Status of Women in Astronomy) standpoint. But, let's not jump to conclusions too quickly. Here is a plot I made of fraction of women
PhDs in astronomy vs year, with extrapolation into the future. The data are from the American
Institute of Physics. Yes, there
is a significant steady trend of increasing percentage of women receiving PhDs
in astronomy.
A simple fit and
extrapolation shown by the dashed line gives a rough idea of where we are
headed. If the trend continues
with current slope, the percentage will nicely increase, but not reach 50%
until mid-century. Even that would
not give total balance in the field since the fraction of women faculty members
will lag behind the PhD numbers.
For example, while the percentage of women PhD recipients in astronomy
was 23% in 2010, the demographics panel of the Astro2010 Decadal Survey found
only 15% with tenured faculty positions.
So, in summary, women
are surging ahead in college education, while men seem to be troublingly
stagnant. There is also an
increasing fraction of women in astronomy, but it will take a long time to ever
reach 50%.
Here is the link to the
On Point archive of the show. The
host is Tom Ashbrook and his guests were Jim Kessler, executive at Third Way,
Peg Tyre, education reporter, and David Autor, professor of economics at the
MIT.
http://onpoint.wbur.org/2014/05/12/boys-falling-behind-girls-education
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