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優(yōu)秀女科學(xué)家的主要障礙:組建家庭

優(yōu)秀女科學(xué)家的主要障礙:組建家庭

Elizabeth Segran 2014年11月20日
一種觀點(diǎn)認(rèn)為,,生兒育女和做女科學(xué)家是相互排斥的,。為了撫養(yǎng)子女,的確有不少女科學(xué)家在事業(yè)巔峰期放棄了科研工作。有鑒于此,,以歐萊雅為代表的私人公司已經(jīng)開始為女性科學(xué)家提供盡可能早的幫助,,以幫助她們度過(guò)生育子女的關(guān)鍵階段,。
????
歐萊雅女科學(xué)家獎(jiǎng)得主參觀公司的研究與創(chuàng)新實(shí)驗(yàn)室,。

????所有行業(yè)的女性都在努力尋找兼顧職業(yè)與家庭生活,。對(duì)于從事研究的女科學(xué)家來(lái)說(shuō),要實(shí)現(xiàn)這種平衡更加困難,。二十八九歲或30歲出頭時(shí),,她們需要發(fā)表論文,落實(shí)研究經(jīng)費(fèi)來(lái)保持競(jìng)爭(zhēng)力,,根本顧不上生兒育女,。

????作為一個(gè)嬰兒的媽媽,勞倫?奧康奈爾曾親身經(jīng)歷過(guò)這種緊張感,。她說(shuō)道:“一種觀點(diǎn)認(rèn)為,,生兒育女和做女科學(xué)家是相互排斥的?!眾W康奈爾目前是哈佛大學(xué)(Harvard University)博士后研究員,,她的研究課題是,,如何用有毒箭蛙皮膚上的化學(xué)物質(zhì)生產(chǎn)止痛藥、抗生素和心臟病藥物,?!白鳛榭茖W(xué)家,讀研究生和博士后的那幾年應(yīng)該是我們最富有成效的時(shí)期,,但作為女性,,這段時(shí)間又會(huì)與我們生孩子的時(shí)間重合,因此,,我們很難同時(shí)處理好這兩個(gè)方面?!?/p>

????有些大學(xué)已經(jīng)開始提供帶薪產(chǎn)假和哺乳室等福利,。但盡管如此,有孩子的女性還是發(fā)現(xiàn)她們落后于男性同事,。許多女科學(xué)家在自身能力即將達(dá)到鼎盛時(shí)期放棄了研究工作:在美國(guó),,女性取得了46%的理工科博士學(xué)位,但在獲得終身職位的科學(xué)家中,,僅有三分之一為女性,。與之類似,只有不到四分之一的正教授是女性,。

????奧康奈爾表示,,職業(yè)支持的時(shí)機(jī)落后于這種趨勢(shì)。她解釋稱,,美國(guó)國(guó)家科學(xué)基金會(huì)(National Science Foundation)和美國(guó)國(guó)家衛(wèi)生研究院(National Institutes of Health)正在努力培養(yǎng)更多女性,,但它們資助的往往是那些已經(jīng)從事多年科研工作的女科學(xué)家??蓡?wèn)題在于,,許多女性在到達(dá)這個(gè)時(shí)點(diǎn)前,已經(jīng)離開了科研領(lǐng)域,。

????現(xiàn)在,,私營(yíng)公司已經(jīng)開始為女性科學(xué)家提供盡可能早的幫助,比如在她們撫養(yǎng)孩子的艱難時(shí)刻,。2003年,,歐萊雅(L’Oreal)開始為年度女科學(xué)家(Woman in Science)頒發(fā)60,000美元獎(jiǎng)金,以幫助卓越的女科學(xué)家度過(guò)這個(gè)關(guān)鍵階段,,奧康奈爾便是今年的獲獎(jiǎng)?wù)咧弧?/p>

????今年五分之四的獲獎(jiǎng)?wù)叨际浅鯙槿四傅呐钥茖W(xué)家,,這并非巧合。以斯坦福大學(xué)(Stanford University)博士后科學(xué)家莉薇婭?艾波琳為例,。她正在研究一種快速診斷癌癥的新方法,;她有一個(gè)六個(gè)月大的女兒,。她注意到,許多男性同事在妻子剛剛生下小孩的時(shí)候,,并未休假陪產(chǎn),。艾波琳說(shuō)道:“女性則沒(méi)得選。我并不是說(shuō)自己不希望休假來(lái)陪伴我的寶貝,,但這證明,,女性很容易就會(huì)落后于男同事?!?/p>

????Women across industries struggle to navigate the competing demands of career and family. This balancing act is even trickier for research scientists. They have a small window in their late twenties and early thirties to stay competitive by publishing papers and landing research grants.

????As the mother of a toddler, Lauren O’Connell has experienced the tension first-hand. “There is a perception that raising a family and being a female scientist are mutually exclusive,” she says. O’Connell is currently a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard, where she’s studying how chemicals found on the skin of poisonous dart frogs can be used to create painkillers, antibiotics and heart medications. “As scientists, our graduate school and postdoctoral years are expected to be our most productive, but for women, they also coincide with our child-bearing years, so managing the two can be very difficult.”

????Universities have started offering benefits like paid maternity leave and lactation rooms. But despite these accommodations, women with children still find themselves falling behind their male colleagues. Many female scientists will abandon their research right when they are about to hit their stride: women receive 46% of science doctorates in the U.S., yet only a third of scientists employed in tenure-track positions are women and less than a quarter of full professors are women.

????O’Connell says that the timing of professional support is behind this trend. The National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health are trying to promote more women, she explains, but they tend to fund scientists who are further along in their careers—an issue, since many women have already left the field by that point.

????Private companies are now stepping up to give women scientists help earlier on, when they are in the thick of raising young children. Since 2003, L’Oreal has awarded an annual Women in Science grant of $60,000 to help exceptional female scientists through this critical stage of their careers—and O’Connell is among this year’s pool of recipients.

????It’s no coincidence that four out of five of this year’s winners are new mothers. Livia Eberlin, for instance, is a postdoctoral scientist at Stanford who is developing a new method of rapidly diagnosing cancer; she’s also the mother of a six-month old baby girl. She’s noticed that many of her male colleagues did not take advantage of paternity leave when their wives had babies. “For a woman, you just don’t have that option,” says Eberlin. “Not that I wouldn’t want to take that time off to bond with my newborn, but it just shows how easy it is for women to fall behind their male colleagues.”

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