Sassler Sharon, Glass Jennifer, Levitte Yael, Michelmore Katherine M
Cornell University, Department of Policy Analysis & Management, 297 Martha Van Rensselaer Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, United States.
Department of Sociology & Population Research Center, 305 E. 23rd Street, A1700, University of Texas - Austin, Austin, TX 78712-1699, United States.
Soc Sci Res. 2017 Mar;63:192-208. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2016.09.014. Epub 2016 Sep 28.
Women remain underrepresented in the STEM workforce. We assess explanations for women's underrepresentation in STEM jobs, focusing on a cohort that came of age in the 1980s and 1990s, when women dramatically increased their representation in the scientific labor force. Data are from the NLSY79, and our analysis focuses on members of this cohort who received a college degree, with an emphasis on those who completed a degree in a STEM field. Our analyses test the extent to which college major, expectations to work in STEM, and family expectations shaped transitions into STEM occupations within two years of degree completion. Among those majoring in STEM fields there were no gender differences in transitioning into STEM jobs, though there were sizable differences in transitions to STEM employment by field of study. Of note are gender differences in associations between family expectations and transitions into STEM employment. The most career oriented women, who expected to marry late and limit fertility, were no more likely to enter STEM jobs than were women who anticipated marrying young and having two or more children. The men most likely to enter STEM occupations, in contrast, adhered to significantly more conventional gender ideologies than their female counterparts, expecting to marry at younger ages but also to remain childless. Results of our regression decomposition indicated that marriage and family expectations and gender ideology worked in opposite directions for men and women. Nonetheless, the majority of the gender disparity in transitions into STEM jobs was related to women's underrepresentation in engineering and computer science fields of study.
在科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)领域的劳动力中,女性的占比仍然较低。我们评估了女性在STEM工作中占比低的原因,重点关注20世纪80年代和90年代成年的一批人,在那个时期,女性在科学劳动力中的占比大幅增加。数据来自全国青年纵向调查(NLSY79),我们的分析重点是这批获得大学学位的人,尤其关注那些完成了STEM领域学位的人。我们的分析测试了大学专业、从事STEM工作的期望以及家庭期望在多大程度上影响了学位完成后两年内转向STEM职业的转变。在STEM领域主修的人中,转向STEM工作时没有性别差异,不过在转向不同STEM领域就业方面存在相当大的差异。值得注意的是,家庭期望与转向STEM就业之间的关联存在性别差异。最有职业导向的女性,即那些期望晚婚并限制生育的女性,进入STEM工作的可能性并不比那些预期早婚并生育两个或更多孩子的女性更高。相比之下,最有可能进入STEM职业的男性比女性更坚持传统的性别观念,他们期望更年轻结婚,但也希望不要孩子。我们的回归分解结果表明,婚姻和家庭期望以及性别观念对男性和女性的影响方向相反。尽管如此,转向STEM工作的性别差异大部分与女性在工程和计算机科学研究领域的占比低有关。