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Women’s Science

Learning and Succeeding from the Margins

With Linda Behm, Nancy Lawrence, and Karen Tonso
Are there any places where women succeed in science? Numerous studies in recent years have documented and lamented a gender gap in science and engineering. From elementary school through college, women’s interest in science steadily declines, and as adults, they are less likely to pursue careers in science-related fields.

Women’s Science offers a dramatic counterpoint not only to these findings but also to the related, narrow assumption that "real science" only occurs in research and laboratory investigation. This book describes women engaged with science or engineering at the margins: an innovative high school genetics class; a school-to-work internship for prospective engineers, an environmental action group, and a nonprofit conservation agency. In these places—where people use or rely on science for public, social, or community purposes—the authors found a remarkably high proportion of women. Moreover, these women were successful at learning and using technical knowledge, they advanced in roughly equal percentages to men, and they generally enjoyed their work.

Yet, even in these more marginal workplaces, women had to pay a price. Working outside traditional laboratories, they enjoy little public prestige and receive significantly less financial compensation. Although most employers claimed to treat men and women equally, women in fact only achieved success when they acted like male professionals.

Women’s Science is an original and provocative contribution that expands our conception of scientific practice as it reconfigures both women’s role in science and the meaning of science in contemporary society.

290 pages | 8 line drawings, 3 tables | 6 x 9 | © 1998

Education: Education--General Studies

Gender and Sexuality

Women's Studies

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface
Introduction: Learning and Succeeding from the Margins
Pt. 1: The Gendered Landscape of Science and Engineering
1: Women (Still) Need Not Apply
2: In the "Heretical Sectors": Where the Women Are
Pt. 2: Practice on the Margins: Getting In, Doing Well, and Gaining Power
3: Learning Science in an Innovative Genetics Course
4: Learning to Be an Engineer
5: Science and Politics in an Environmental Action Group
6: Science and Scientists in a Conservation Corporation
Pt. 3: Discourses and Struggles
7: Women’s Status and the Discourse of Gender Neutrality at Work
8: In the Presence of Women’s Power: Women’s Struggle at Work
9: Situated Science, the Presence of Women, and the Practices of Work and School
Notes
References
Index

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