2015
DOI: 10.1037/a0039068
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Career–life balance for women of color: Experiences in science and engineering academia.

Abstract: The National Science Foundation recently recognized that career–life balance in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) may present some unique challenges for women of color compared with their White and/or male counterparts, thus negatively impacting retention and advancement for a minority demographic that has long been underrepresented in STEM (National Science Foundation, 2011). However, there is a dearth of literature on this topic. This article advances our understanding of the nature of… Show more

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Cited by 115 publications
(106 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
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“…Our prior research (e.g., Hodari, Ong, Ko, & Smith, 2016;Kachchaf et al, 2015;Ko et al, 2014;Ong et al, 2016), and the research of others (e.g., Carlone & Johnson, 2007;Cheryan, Master, & Meltzoff, 2015;Johnson et al, 2011;Melkers & Welch, 2009;Seymour & Hewitt, 1997;Sosnowski, 2002;Tate & Linn, 2005) indicate that STEM culture occupies a dominant space in which requirements for successful ongoing participation are shaped, at least in part, by the force of racialized and gendered privilege (and withholding of privileges) that reproduces itself over time. Relatedly, our present analysis aligns with existing studies on student persistence within STEM culture (e.g., Camacho & Lord, 2013;Chang, Eagan, Lin, & Hurtado, 2011;Chang et al, 2014;Ellington, 2006;Ellis, 2001;Espinosa, 2011;Leyva, 2016;Nuñez, 2011; Journal of Research in Science Teaching Perna et al, 2010;Soldner et al, 2012;Tate & Linn, 2005;Varma, 2002;Varma et al, 2006;Yosso, 2006;Yosso et al, 2009) that argue that counterspaces, and underrepresented students' participation in them, are shaped in response to the central practices governing privilege, offering a haven from it.…”
Section: Research Question 2: Social Factors Of Stem Persistencementioning
confidence: 90%
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“…Our prior research (e.g., Hodari, Ong, Ko, & Smith, 2016;Kachchaf et al, 2015;Ko et al, 2014;Ong et al, 2016), and the research of others (e.g., Carlone & Johnson, 2007;Cheryan, Master, & Meltzoff, 2015;Johnson et al, 2011;Melkers & Welch, 2009;Seymour & Hewitt, 1997;Sosnowski, 2002;Tate & Linn, 2005) indicate that STEM culture occupies a dominant space in which requirements for successful ongoing participation are shaped, at least in part, by the force of racialized and gendered privilege (and withholding of privileges) that reproduces itself over time. Relatedly, our present analysis aligns with existing studies on student persistence within STEM culture (e.g., Camacho & Lord, 2013;Chang, Eagan, Lin, & Hurtado, 2011;Chang et al, 2014;Ellington, 2006;Ellis, 2001;Espinosa, 2011;Leyva, 2016;Nuñez, 2011; Journal of Research in Science Teaching Perna et al, 2010;Soldner et al, 2012;Tate & Linn, 2005;Varma, 2002;Varma et al, 2006;Yosso, 2006;Yosso et al, 2009) that argue that counterspaces, and underrepresented students' participation in them, are shaped in response to the central practices governing privilege, offering a haven from it.…”
Section: Research Question 2: Social Factors Of Stem Persistencementioning
confidence: 90%
“…These groups—including women, racially/ethnically underrepresented students, and women of color—have traditionally not been included in STEM education or careers in proportions that are representative of their U.S. population (Committee on Equal Opportunities for Science and Engineering [CEOSE], 2014; Ong, Wright, Espinosa, & Orfield, ). Counterspaces are made necessary by, and are partially defined by, STEM's culture and its structural manifestations and behaviors that have historically privileged norms of success that favor competitive, individualistic, and solitary practices—norms that are associated with White male scientists (Johnson, Brown, Carlone, & Cuevas, ; Kachchaf, Ko, Hodari, & Ong, ; Ong, ; Traweek, ).…”
Section: Research Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Academic and personal support such as family encouragement or peer and faculty relationship and mentoring by faculty can increase the persistence of women and particularly women of color in STEM fields [89][90][91][92][93]. Ong et al [91] suggests that supportive mentoring relations with the faculty can be crucial but rarely provided for minority groups in STEM disciplines such as women of color.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Traditionally, women have had to, and continue to, champion for resources, access, benefits, and promotion when it comes to gender equity issues in the academic workplace (Feeney and Bernal, 2010;Bachman, 2011;Villablanca et al, 2011;Adamo, 2013;Beddoes and Pawley, 2014;Kachchaf et al, 2015;Su and Bozeman, 2016). Changes to policies and procedures are often achieved through service and committee work which are traditionally unequally shouldered by women faculty compared to men (Guarino and Borden, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%