This article focuses on faculty members ’ allocation of time to teaching and research, conceptualizing these—and the mismatch between preferred and actual time allocations—as examples of gender inequality in academic employment. Utilizing data from the 1999 National Study of Postsecondary Faculty, I find that (1) women faculty members prefer to spend a greater percentage of their time on teaching, while men prefer to spend more time on research, although these preferences are themselves constrained; (2) women faculty members spend a greater percentage of their workweek on teaching and a smaller percentage on research than men, gaps that cannot be explained by preferences or educational and institutional attributes; and (3) women faculty mem...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Career progression for women academics to higher levels is not in proportion to their representatio...
Many previous time allocation studies treat work as a single activity and examine trade-offs between...
Despite an increase in the number of PhDs earned by women and faculty of color in recent decades, th...
Summary This thesis is a collection of three related papers examining how academics handle multi...
The goal of this paper is to examine the extent to which the clustering of female faculty in particu...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Gender should not make a difference to the teaching workloads and research outputs of academics. Th...
This study explores how faculty at one research-intensive university spend their time on research, t...
This article critically examines current university tenure and promotion criteria, suggesting that s...
This article critically examines current university tenure and promotion criteria, suggesting that s...
University faculty divide their time into their main academic responsibilities, typically identified...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Career progression for women academics to higher levels is not in proportion to their representatio...
Many previous time allocation studies treat work as a single activity and examine trade-offs between...
Despite an increase in the number of PhDs earned by women and faculty of color in recent decades, th...
Summary This thesis is a collection of three related papers examining how academics handle multi...
The goal of this paper is to examine the extent to which the clustering of female faculty in particu...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Gender should not make a difference to the teaching workloads and research outputs of academics. Th...
This study explores how faculty at one research-intensive university spend their time on research, t...
This article critically examines current university tenure and promotion criteria, suggesting that s...
This article critically examines current university tenure and promotion criteria, suggesting that s...
University faculty divide their time into their main academic responsibilities, typically identified...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Do lifestyle preferences contribute to the remaining gender gap in higher positions in academia with...
Career progression for women academics to higher levels is not in proportion to their representatio...