“That’s just the way it is”: bullying and harassment in STEM academia

IF 5.6 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Estelle Corbett, Julie Barnett, Lucy Yeomans, Leda Blackwood
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Abstract

The under-representation of women and other minority group members in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) academia is a problem internationally and is attributed in part to hostile workplace cultures. We draw on the social identity perspective to examine the dynamic inter and intragroup processes entailed in these experiences. In this paper, we report a reflexive thematic analysis of 219 responses to a free-text question on bullying and harassment embedded in a national survey of 40 STEM departments from across the United Kingdom. Most were women (53%) at an early, pre-lectureship career stage. Our analysis shows who is the perpetrator and who is the victim is not arbitrary, and neither is the form that it takes; majority group members draw on discourses that warrant the exclusion of minority group members (e.g., women are not smart; incompatibility with religious identity). In this ‘othering’, minority group members learn that one is not regarded as a bona fide STEM academic ingroup member and accordingly are constrained in being able to claim and act on that identity. Thus, it is not just the acts themselves that are problematic, but the ways in which being denied a shared STEM academic identity is consequential for a range of putative benefits and leads to a range of strategies that all confer costs. The solution must rest with senior STEM academics and with institutions. First, we need to challenge discourses and practices that narrowly define the boundaries and content of STEM academic identity. Second, all members of a community need to perceive an alignment between the purported values of an organisation for diversity, inclusion, and respect and how that organisation responds when those principles are violated. Formal processes of remedy need to recognise the dynamics entailed in status differences and remove the onus of complaint from isolated, low status individuals. In addition, there is a need to recognise the ways in which perpetrators are embedded in networks of support both within and without the university; and the importance, therefore, of widening the scope of evidence gathering and intervention.
"就是这样":STEM 学术界的欺凌和骚扰行为
女性和其他少数群体成员在 STEM(科学、技术、工程和数学)学术界的代表性不足是一个国际性问题,部分原因是工作场所文化充满敌意。我们从社会认同的角度来研究这些经历所涉及的群体间和群体内的动态过程。在本文中,我们报告了对 219 个回答的反思性主题分析,这些回答是对英国 40 个科学、技术、工程和数学系的全国调查中有关欺凌和骚扰的自由文本问题的回答。大多数回答者为女性(53%),她们正处于讲师职业生涯的早期阶段。我们的分析表明,谁是施暴者,谁是受害者并不是任意的,其形式也不是任意的;多数群体成员利用各种话语来排斥少数群体成员(例如,女性不聪明;与宗教身份不相容)。在这种 "他者化 "的过程中,少数群体成员了解到自己并不被视为真正的 STEM 学术内群体成员,因此在声称自己的身份并据此行事时受到了限制。因此,有问题的不仅仅是行为本身,而是被剥夺共同的 STEM 学术身份会带来一系列所谓的好处,并导致一系列策略,而所有这些策略都要付出代价。解决办法必须由资深的 STEM 学者和机构来解决。首先,我们需要挑战那些狭隘地界定 STEM 学术身份的界限和内容的言论和做法。其次,一个社区的所有成员都需要认识到,一个组织所宣称的多样性、包容性和尊重的价值观与该组织在这些原则被违反时如何应对之间的一致性。正式的补救程序需要认识到地位差异所带来的动态变化,并消除孤立的、地位低下的个人的投诉责任。此外,还需要认识到施暴者在大学内外的支持网络中的嵌入方式;因此,扩大证据收集和干预的范围非常重要。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Stem Education
International Journal of Stem Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
12.40
自引率
11.90%
发文量
68
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of STEM Education is a multidisciplinary journal in subject-content education that focuses on the study of teaching and learning in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). It is being established as a brand new, forward looking journal in the field of education. As a peer-reviewed journal, it is positioned to promote research and educational development in the rapidly evolving field of STEM education around the world.
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