Title: Student Affairs Learning Community
1Student Affairs Learning Community
- Women in Higher Education
2Who We Are
- Carrie Christian, Residence Life
- Rhonda Laskoski, Academic Support Center
- Lynne Mazadoorian, Academic Support Center
- Karen Quinn, TRiO
- Dawn Soufleris, Student Conduct
- Jeffrey Sulik, Residence Life
- Phyllis Walker, Community Service Center
3Student Affairs Learning Community 2005-2006
- Expected Outcomes
- Build relationships among members
- Perform literature review on topic area
- Create summary report of findings
4Theme Women in Higher Education
- Theme selected under advisement of Vice President
(Women in Higher Education) - RIT Realities
- 31 of enrolled students in Fall 2005 were women
(this varies greatly by college). - Current graduation rate for women is 65 compared
to men at 53 (this varies by college). - Incoming women report having lower overall
confidence in academic ability, computer and math
skills, emotional/physical health, and
intellectual self-confidence, as compared to
their male peers.
Data from RITs Office of Institutional Research
and Policy Studies and The Cooperative
Institutional Research Program (2005).
5SALC Process
- Initial Meeting and Readings
- Womens Way of Knowing (excerpt) 1
- Perrys Intellectual Scheme (excerpt) 2
- A Nudge is Best (excerpt) 3
- Synthesis, Assessment and Application (excerpt) 4
- Individual Topic Assignments
- Center survey of current services and program
- Investigation of a core area related to women in
higher education - Meeting with Mary-Beth and Kit Mayberry about the
state of womens issues at RIT.
1, 2 4 Love, P. G. Guthrie, V. L. (1999).
Understanding and applying cognitive
development theory. New Directions for Student
Services, No. 88. San Francisco Jossey-Bass. 3
Kloss, R. J. (1994). A nudge is best Helping
students through the Perry scheme of intellectual
development. College Teaching 42 151-58.
6SA Centers _at_ RIT
- What services does your Center provide to women?
- Are there any gaps in services to female students
that your Center has identified as areas of
concern? - What are your Centers perceptions of women at
RIT? - Is someone in your Center assigned to assess
womens issues? - Do you have any written information that
addresses specific concerns of women? - Whats the ratio of male/female staffing in your
Center? Whats the female/male ratio of student
users of your Centers services? - Are there future initiatives for women that your
Center hopes to implement? If so, what are
they?  Are there any perceived barriers to
implementation? Â Â Â
7SA Centers _at_ RIT
- Observations
- Wide variance of services for women (some centers
provide dedicated services while others
intentionally do not target by gender). - Overall sense of responsiveness to needs of women
when they arise, but there could be more
coordination across areas. There could be a more
intentional, focused approach from the division. - Some programs designed primarily for women are
poorly attended. Need to balance women only vs.
mixed population events inclusive of women.
8Core Research Areas
- Womens relationship to
- Leadership
- Higher Education
- Development
- STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and
Mathematics) - Involvement/Engagement
- Athletics
- Greek Life
- International
9LeadershipCollege Female Presidents
- 2001
- 21 Female
- 12 Minority
- 76 Doctorate Degree
- Average Age 57
- 1986
- 9.5 Female
- 8.1 Minority
- 76 Doctorate Degree
- Average Age 52
The American college president (2002). The
American Council on Education. Retrieved
February 10, 2006 from http//www.acenet.edu/AM/T
emplate.cfm?SectionCPATemplate/CM/HTMLDisplay.c
fmContentID11442
10Leadership Nation Wide
- In 1998 only 460 female presidents out of 2,380
presidents total. - Average female college president salary averages
at 200,000. - Average male college president salary averages at
300,000. -
The Chronicle survey of presidents of 4-year
colleges. (2005, November 4). The Chronicle of
Higher Education. Retrieved February 10, 2006
from http//chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i11/president
surveytables.htm
11Women in Higher Education
- TRENDS IN GENDER EQUITY OF GIRLS AND WOMEN
- Increase in negative attitude of 12th graders
toward school, particularly among females. - 2002 higher proportion of males taking AP exams
in science and calculus, and receiving higher
scores. - 2001 females more likely than males to persist
and attain Bachelor degrees (66/59). - Females as likely as males to use computers at
home and at school.
Trends in educational equity of girls and women,
2004. (2005). Educational Statistics Quarterly,
6(4).
12Women in Higher Education
- MINORITIES 2000
- Black women earned 2x as many bachelors degrees
as black men. - Less than 50 graduate from college within 6
years because of tuition cost increases, social
adjustment issues, lack of academic preparation
in high school. - Persistence Factors - family influences,
financial motivation, mathematics and science
proficiency, academic advising, quality of
instruction, availability of faculty. - Manhattan Institute Report 2/3 of students are
academically unprepared for college.
Persistence in engineering education Experiences
of first year students at a historically black
university (2005). Proceedings of the 2005
American society for Engineering Education Annual
Conference Exposition.
13Components of Womens Development
14Womens Development
- Core theory on womens development is
well-developed. - To fully understand women students development,
we must include all factors that contribute to
student development. - Nationally, there appears to be a strong trend
towards womens professional and leadership
development programs.
15Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM)
Fall 2005 RIT Enrollment. Retrieved April 17,
2006 from http//www.rit.edu/wwwits/services/irp
s/data/data/ethnic2005.xls
16Factors that Influence Retention of Women in STEM
programs
- Weed-out system is a long established practice
in STEM programs and has a more significant
impact on women. 1 - Traditional college models are competitively
based and less nurturing. Women are less prepared
for and/or comfortable than men with a
competitive model and benefit from praise and
support. 2 - Factors for success
- Role Models and Mentoring (especially peers).
- Enrollment in Advanced Placement courses in high
school. - Strong teacher preparation and training
pre-college. - Participation in pre-college workshops and camps.
1 Etzkowitz, H., Kemelgor, C., Uzzi., B. (2000).
Athena unbound The advancement of women in
science and technology Cambridge, UK Cambridge
University Press. 2 National Science Foundation,
(1999). Retrieved February 10, 2006 from
hhtp//www.nsf.gov/pubs/2001/nsf01130/nsf01130.htm
.
17STEM
- WOMEN IN ENGINEERING
- Why do many women drop out of engineering
majors? - Not lack of academic ability 2/3 of women who
left had engineering grade averages of A or B in
a previous year discouraged by grades even if
doing well. - Discouraging academic climate, faculty and peers
isolation lack of programming experience. - What are characteristics of women who stay in
engineering majors? - Persistence Factors - Self-confidence, Community
building, Networking. - Active use of support resources and college
activities.
- Goodman Research Group, Inc. (2002). Final report
of the womens experiences in college engineering
(WECE) project. Cambridge, MA. - Study indicates that support activities at
university play a vital role in retaining women
in engineering majors, Engineers Week. Retrieved
February 10, 2006 from www.eweek.org/site/News/Ewe
ek/univ_study.shtml. - Pieronek, C. McWilliams, L. Silliman, S., Uhran,
J., Gunty, M., Grat., C., (2005). Beyond the
numbers A deeper look Into the retention of
female engineering students. Proceedings of the
2005 WEPA/NAMEPA Joint Conference.
18STEM
- WOMEN IN COMPUTER SCIENCE
- Experiences and perspectives of women are, in
part, shaped by their minority and, sometimes,
token status rather than by gender. - Gender divide in how men and women relate to
computing largely due to cultural and
environmental conditions, little to do with
gender, misconception of what CS is and who
computer scientists are, misperceptions of the
field. - Success of CMU women _at_School of Computer Science
action oriented organization, leadership roles
for women, opportunities to discuss homework with
roommates late at night and at meals, public
speaking and community workshop opportunities.
Blum, L., Frieze, C., Hazzan, O., Dias, M (2006).
Culture and environment as determinants of
womens participation in computing Revealing the
women-CS fit. Retrieved April 20, 2006 from
http//www.cs.cmu.edu/7Ecfrieze/SIGCSE_06_final.p
df ADVANCE Increasing the Participation and
Advancement of Women in Academic Science and
Engineering Careers, NSF, 2005.
19Involvement/Engagement of Women
- Student-student interactions have a positive
correlation to satisfaction with student life and
leadership development. - Out of class contact with faculty has a positive
correlation to academic success. - Women are more comfortable in environments where
there is a sizable female population. - Membership in a sorority does not have any
significant effects on student satisfaction
outcomes.
20Women In Greek Life
- Nationally, membership in College Pan-Hellenic
Groups - 3,777,160 initiated collegiate or alumnae members
- 79,000 new members in 2005-06
- 2900 undergraduate chapters
- 600 college campuses hosting CPC groups in North
America (US and Canada) - 4,600 Alumnae Associations
21Women In Greek Life
- Membership nationally in Greek-letter
organizations falling - 34 decline in past 10 years.
- Research competing interests, cost, reputation/
bad press, technology as basis for decline. - Very little research regarding proven benefits of
sorority life for undergrads, except for basic
need for belonging.
22Women In Greek Life at RIT
- Fall 2005 Scholarship Report
- All-Sorority GPA 3.016
- All-Fraternity GPA 2.633
- All-RIT GPA 3.1
- All Greek Philanthropy Report
- 401 programs (sponsored, co-sponsored, or
attended) - 5,366 hours of community service completed
- 11,249.20 donated to various philanthropic
endeavors
23Women in Athletics
- National issues regarding Women in Athletics
- Title IX and equity
- 525 athletes at RIT
- 50/50 male-female
- NCAA Committee on Womens Athletics
- Senior Women Administrator Role
- Coaches
- National Crisis
- Balance of work, family
24International Women
- International Students tend to be the last to
seek help (Men and Women). 1 - The difference in the culture is a large
challenge, but the difference in the classroom
culture is an even bigger challenge (Men and
Women).2 - Gap in the literature related specifically to
international women. - International Women comprise approximately 3 of
the student population at RIT and approximately
4 nationally. 3
- 1 Institute of International Education, Open
Doors Data. (2005). Retrieved January 28, 2006
from http//opendoors.iienetwork.org/page/69688. - 2 3 Kadison, R. Foy DiGeronimo, T. (2004).
College of the overwhelmed The campus mental
health crisis and what to do about it. San
Francisco Jossey-Bass.
25Considerations for the future
- What do women experience at RIT?
- RIT may benefit from further analysis of existing
survey data by gender. Compare outcomes and
develop recommendations. - Who will do this? Task Force? Committee? Next
SALC? - How are women growing and changing while enrolled
at RIT? - How does/can RIT support womens development at
RIT? - How can these be measured?
- What services are being offered specifically to
women University-wide? - A services survey could reveal gaps or
duplication in service. - Who will do this? Within/beyond SA? Task Force?
Committee? Next SALC?
26Whats Going on Outside of RIT?
- For students
- http//women.cs.cmu.edu
- http//www.idst.vt.edu/ws/cybergirl2.htm
- http//news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey327set
appvarpage(1) - For professionals
- NASPAs Center for Scholarship, Research and
Professional Development for Women has proposed
an on-line journal called the Journal of Women in
Higher Education (JWHE). The projected 1st issue
date is Feb-March 2007.
27Theories Related to Womens Development
- Cognitive-Structural Development
- Piaget - Intellectual Development
- Kohlberg - Moral Reasoning
- Gilligan - Theory of Women's Moral Development
- Baxter Magolda - Epistemological Reflection Model
- Perry - Intellectual and Ethical Development
- Belenky, Clinchy, Goldberger and Tarule -
Women's Ways of Knowing - King and Kitchner -Â Reflective Judgment Model
28Theories Related to Womens Development
- Psychosocial Identity Development
- Chickering - Identity Development
- Schlossberg - Transition Theory
- Cass - Model of Sexual Identity Formation
- DAugelli - Sexual Identity
- Josselson - Women's Identity Development
- Helms - Racial Identity
- Cross - African-American Identity
- Atkinson, Morton Sue - Minority Identity
Development
29Theories Related to Womens Development
- Typology Environment
- Kolb - Theory of Experiential Learning
- Gardner - Multiple Intelligences
- Holland - Vocational personalities and
environments - Myers-Briggs - Personality Types
- Astin - Involvement Theory
- Tinto - Theory of Student Departure