Department of Biology, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
Provost Emerita, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2023 May 15;18(5):e0285602. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0285602. eCollection 2023.
Persons Excluded due to Ethnicity and Race (PEERs) remain underrepresented in university faculties, particularly in science, technology, engineering, math and medicine (STEMM) fields, despite increasing representation among students, and mounting evidence supporting the importance of PEER faculty in positively impacting both scientific and educational outcomes. In fact, the ratio of PEER faculty to students has been steadily dropping since 2000. In our case study, we examine the factors that explain creation of an unusually diverse faculty within a biology department. We analyzed nearly 40 years of hiring data in the study department and show that this department (the study department), historically and currently, maintains a significantly higher proportion of PEERs on faculty as compared to two national datasets. Additionally, we identify factors that contributed to hiring of PEERs into tenure and tenure-track positions. We observed a significant increase in the hiring of PEERs concurrent with the implementation of a co-hiring policy (p = 0.04) which allowed a single search to make two hires when at least one candidate was a PEER. In contrast, three key informants at sister departments reported that co-hiring policies did not result in PEER hires, but instead different practices were effective. In line with one of these practices, we observe a possible association between search committees with at least one PEER member and PEER hiring (p = 0.055). Further, the presence of particular faculty members (Agents of Change) on search committees is associated with PEER hiring. In this case study the combination of a co-hire policy based on the principle of interest-convergence to redress hiring inequities, along with the presence of agents of change, increased faculty PEER representation in STEMM departments.
由于种族和民族原因被排除在外的人(PEERs)在大学教职员工中仍然代表性不足,尤其是在科学、技术、工程、数学和医学(STEMM)领域,尽管学生中的代表性越来越高,并且越来越多的证据支持 PEER 教职员工在积极影响科学和教育成果方面的重要性。事实上,自 2000 年以来,PEER 教职员工与学生的比例一直在稳步下降。在我们的案例研究中,我们考察了在生物学系内创造异常多样化教职员工的因素。我们分析了研究系近 40 年的招聘数据,结果表明,与两个全国性数据集相比,该系(研究系)历史上和目前都在教职员工中保持了更高比例的 PEERs。此外,我们确定了促成招聘 PEER 进入终身教职和终身教职轨道职位的因素。我们观察到,随着共同招聘政策(p = 0.04)的实施,PEER 的招聘人数显著增加,该政策允许在至少有一名候选人是 PEER 的情况下,一次搜索可以进行两次招聘。相比之下,两个姊妹系的三位关键知情人士报告称,共同招聘政策并未导致 PEER 招聘,而是其他做法更为有效。与其中一种做法一致,我们观察到搜索委员会至少有一名 PEER 成员与 PEER 招聘之间可能存在关联(p = 0.055)。此外,搜索委员会中存在特定的教职员工(变革推动者)与 PEER 招聘有关。在这个案例研究中,基于利益趋同原则的共同招聘政策的结合,以及变革推动者的存在,增加了 STEMM 系的教职员工中 PEER 的代表性。