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过分强调出版物可能会在 COVID-19 之前和期间使 STEM 领域中历史上被排斥的群体处于不利地位:一项基于北美调查的研究。

Overemphasis on publications may disadvantage historically excluded groups in STEM before and during COVID-19: A North American survey-based study.

机构信息

School of the Environment, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2023 Sep 27;18(9):e0291124. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0291124. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Publishing is a strong determinant of academic success and there is compelling evidence that identity may influence the academic writing experience and writing output. However, studies rarely quantitatively assess the effects of major life upheavals on trainee writing. The COVID-19 pandemic introduced unprecedented life disruptions that may have disproportionately impacted different demographics of trainees. We analyzed anonymous survey responses from 342 North American environmental biology graduate students and postdoctoral scholars (hereafter trainees) about scientific writing experiences to assess: (1) how identity interacts with scholarly publication totals and (2) how the COVID-19 pandemic influenced trainee perceptions of scholarly writing productivity and whether there were differences among identities. Interestingly, identity had a strong influence on publication totals, but it differed by career stage with graduate students and postdoctoral scholars often having opposite results. We found that trainees identifying as female and those with chronic health conditions or disabilities lag in publication output at some point during training. Additionally, although trainees felt they had more time during the pandemic to write, they reported less productivity and motivation. Trainees who identified as female; Black, Indigenous, or as a Person of Color [BIPOC]; and as first-generation college graduates were much more likely to indicate that the pandemic affected their writing. Disparities in the pandemic's impact on writing were most pronounced for BIPOC respondents; a striking 85% of BIPOC trainees reported that the pandemic affected their writing habits, and overwhelmingly felt unproductive and unmotivated to write. Our results suggest that the disproportionate impact of the pandemic on writing output may only heighten the negative effects commonly reported amongst historically excluded trainees. Based on our findings, we encourage the academy to consider how an overemphasis on publication output during hiring may affect historically excluded groups in STEM-especially in a post-COVID-19 era.

摘要

发表文章是学术成功的重要决定因素,有确凿的证据表明,身份可能会影响学术写作体验和写作成果。然而,研究很少定量评估重大生活剧变对学员写作的影响。COVID-19 大流行带来了前所未有的生活混乱,可能对不同学员群体产生了不成比例的影响。我们分析了来自 342 名北美环境生物学研究生和博士后学者(以下简称学员)的关于科学写作经验的匿名调查回复,以评估:(1)身份如何与学术发表总数相互作用;(2)COVID-19 大流行如何影响学员对学术写作生产力的看法,以及不同身份之间是否存在差异。有趣的是,身份对发表总数有很强的影响,但因职业阶段而异,研究生和博士后学者的结果往往相反。我们发现,在培训期间的某个时候,身份为女性的学员以及患有慢性疾病或残疾的学员在发表成果方面落后。此外,尽管学员们认为在大流行期间有更多时间写作,但他们报告的生产力和动力较低。身份为女性、黑人、原住民或有色人种(BIPOC)以及第一代大学生的学员更有可能表示大流行影响了他们的写作。BIPOC 学员中,大流行对写作的影响存在明显差异;高达 85%的 BIPOC 学员表示大流行影响了他们的写作习惯,绝大多数人感到没有生产力,没有动力去写作。我们的研究结果表明,大流行对写作成果的不成比例影响可能只会加剧在历史上被排斥的学员中普遍报告的负面影响。基于我们的发现,我们鼓励学术界考虑在招聘过程中过分强调发表成果可能会如何影响 STEM 领域中历史上被排斥的群体——尤其是在后 COVID-19 时代。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/4438/10529568/dc1005951524/pone.0291124.g001.jpg

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