The AAS Committee on the Status of Women in Astronomy maintains this blog to disseminate information relevant to astronomers who identify as women and share the perspectives of astronomers from varied backgrounds. If you have an idea for a blog post or topic, please submit a short pitch (less than 300 words). The views expressed on this site are not necessarily the views of the CSWA, the AAS, its Board of Trustees, or its membership.
Wednesday, June 29, 2016
Finding space after Orlando
MacKenzie Warren is just starting a postdoc at Michigan State University after completinghis PhD in Physics at University of Notre Dame. MacKenzie's research is in computational modeling of core-collapse supernovae, particularly the role of nuclear and neutrino processes in the explosion mechanism. The killings in Orlando affected all of us in the LGBTQ community; here is one astronomer's opinion.
A few weeks ago, I was at an astrophysics conference. I spent the week in a room with roughly 50 people brought together by common interests and shared identity. Just as a few weeks before that I had spent an evening at a gay bar with others who also sought refuge from the tense hum of nerves that comes from always being aware of who’s watching. Just as so many people had been drawn to Pulse in Orlando, looking for a place of affirmation.
In the early morning hours of Sunday, June 12th, 49 LGBTQ and allied people were killed, and many more were injured, in a shooting at Pulse nightclub in Orlando. It was Latin night at the club and the vast majority of the victims were Latinx. The headline performers were trans women of color. The media widely declared this an attack against “all of us,” while failing to mention who the victims really were.
Monday, June 27, 2016
Mentoring Minoritized* Students
Friday, June 24, 2016
AASWOMEN Newsletter for June 24, 2016
Issue of June 24, 2016
eds: Daryl Haggard, Nicolle Zellner, Elysse Voyer, & Heather Flewelling
This week's issues:
1. Meet Guest Blogger Heidi Jensen
2. Physics Teaching for Social Justice
3. Women of the Future 2016 Nominations Now Open
4. Videos of Women and People of Color in the Space Sciences
5. Putting a Spotlight on Diversity in Tech Burnout
6. How to Submit to the AASWOMEN newsletter
7. How to Subscribe or Unsubscribe to the AASWOMEN newsletter
!doctype>Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Meet Guest Blogger Heidi Jensen
Heidi B. Jensen is currently looking for opportunities that will lead her to a career in communicating and publicizing science. Heidi would like to use the skills she learned from her M.S. thesis research at SUNY Stony Brook University, specializing in aqueous geochemistry applied to the martian surface, to help the science community make a greater impact on the general public. Heidi is currently employed outside of science while she waits for her first scientific position after graduate school.
Tell us a little about yourself.
I grew up in the Hudson River Valley, about 75 miles north of New York City. I was curiously fascinated with and appreciative of the natural world around me and science provided me with explanations for the natural phenomena that had seems so mysterious and amazing. I was one of the few people in my high school graduating class that knew exactly what I wanted to concentrate my studies in for my undergraduate years at SUNY University at Albany; environmental science. From my experiences outside of academia, I became aware that a lack of interest in preserving the natural world and preventing continued damage to it was caused by two things: a lack of understanding of the observations and science findings that indicated environmental degradation and financial and more basic struggles that kept their attention. Due to this and my experiences as an instructor and researcher in graduate school at Stony Brook University, I have grown to love teaching and communicating science and have made it the main requirement for my next step in my career.
Friday, June 17, 2016
AASWomen Newsletter for June 17, 2016
Issue of June 17, 2016
eds: Daryl Haggard, Nicolle Zellner, Elysse Voyer, & Heather Flewelling
This week's issues:
2. Sexual Harassment: Reports of Serial Groping
3. Coding (and Coloring) the Universe
5. Don't give in to impostor syndrome, astrophysics pioneer tells grads
6. How Sexism Held Back Space Exploration
7. Getting the Diversity Balance Right in Physics
8. How to Submit to the AASWOMEN newsletter
9. How to Subscribe or Unsubscribe to the AASWOMEN newsletter
!doctype>Wednesday, June 15, 2016
Wake the F-ck Up
by Debra L. Winegarten, June 13, 2016
No copyright, share
Enough!
Death of young innocent queer people
Killed because of love
Because of dancing
Because of being different.
Enough!
Silly distractions
Talk of bathroom privileges
Talk of bullying
Talk of Wild West nonsense.
Enough!
Legal sale of assault weapons
To civilians
In the name of Liberty.
Enough!
Numbing with drugs and alcohol
To avoid and deny the horror
Of rampant shootings.
Enough!
Congressional paralysis
Gun lobby pay-offs
Corporate greed.
Remember Stonewall!
Remember Orlando!
It's a bad idea to piss off
Queer people.
Because we are more creative
Because we are more vocal
Because we are more loving
Because we are better dancers.
Because we are better writers
And the pen is mightier than the machine gun.
And you cannot silence us
And you cannot kill us all.
And your hate will not prevail.
And your hate will not prevail.
And your hate will not prevail.
Debra notes, "The views in my poem don't represent the AAS; I'm writing in my 'other' life as an award-winning author."
Debra is a past president of the Texas Jewish Historical Society and has written two Jewish-themed poetry books, "There's Jews in Texas?" and "Where Jewish Grandmothers Come From". For more about her and her writing, check out her web site.
Monday, June 13, 2016
Sexual Harassment: Reports of Serial Groping
Friday, June 10, 2016
AASWomen Newsletter for June 10, 2016
Issue of June 10, 2016
eds: Daryl Haggard, Nicolle Zellner, Elysse Voyer, & Heather Flewelling
This week's issues:
1. Career Profiles: Astronomer to Data Scientist at a Non-Profit
2. An Unlikely Campaign to Move Beyond GRE Scores
3. Excellent articles about Emmy Noether
5. Obstacles facing women of color in tech are steep, and surmountable
6. On the Trail of Women Scientists
7. The career diaries of two women in tech
8. How to Submit to the AASWOMEN newsletter
9. How to Subscribe or Unsubscribe to the AASWOMEN newsletter
!doctype>Tuesday, June 7, 2016
Career Profiles: Astronomer to Data Scientist at a Non-Profit
Friday, June 3, 2016
AASWomen Newsletter for June 3, 2016
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Astronomer Privilege
As a person who has voluntarily given up one of the two most widely recognized privileges in order to be more honest with the world, I have given a lot of thought to the nature of privilege. I would define "privilege" as having advantages in life based on a single characteristic which is deemed more of value to others than not having that characteristic. It is usually totally unearned, but even if "earned", it may offer advantages in social situations that are out of scale with its relevance. A significant part of privilege is not being aware that you have it. All too often, that includes denying that you have it or that it even exists.
In the US, having "white" skin and being of the male gender are generally acknowledged, especially by those who don't possess those traits, as conferring privilege on those who have them. But there are other traits which confer privilege, recognized more by those who don't have them than by those who do. I would never equate the various types of privilege, but have learned that having other privileges can alleviate the effects of lacking major ones (and not having them can make things worse).
Cis-gender privilege for those who continue to live as the gender they were assigned at birth is not necessarily obvious, but when you don't have it, it is both much harder to deal with the world and for the world to deal with you. I have found that unearned privilege accorded me through other traits has helped to balance my life.
Performing as Sophia Ripley, cofounder of the Transcendentalist Brook Farm Community, with other "Women of Brook Farm" in October 2015 |
Does being astronomers give us privilege in our interactions with the rest of the world? The denial of such a privilege by colleagues led me to think more deeply about it. In my own experience, being an astronomer has led to better acceptance of me as a trans person in the world at large. There may be other things about me which have helped, but the curiosity of the general public about our science seems boundless, and it seems that people meet fewer astronomers than they do trans people. As I become the target of their questions about the sky, my identity as an astronomer overrides my less-understandable and less-accepted identity as transgender. This has happened to me frequently enough that I suspect that those who don't notice it either don't get out or are less introspective than me. Astronomy seems to be easier for lay people to relate to than other sciences, so in my life anyway, I have designated it "astronomer privilege". Have you noticed this? I know that sometimes people will ask if you can do their horoscope by conflating astronomers and astrologers (and as a positional astronomer, I'm closer to being in that tradition than most), and that sometimes the idea that we actually study things unbelievably far away can be intimidating, but in general, astronomy is accessible. Do you have any stories to share, or do you think this doesn't really happen?