As many academic mamas do, I waited until I was (almost) tenured to try to have my children. After a couple of miscarriages, I got pregnant with twins. Here I present both personal stories and tales of how colleagues were treated by their department and administration when they were pregnant. Some had administrative duties revoked, some were encouraged to engage in academic dishonesty in order to have maternity leave, and some were not eligible for any leave. I also provide suggestions of how others might handle these encounters better than we pregnant faculty did
An important part of motherhood is having a network of support. For women in university faculty, thi...
This essay discusses the challenges of mothering four very different children--one adopted, one gift...
This proposed study looks at the experience of academic women as they combine the demanding roles of...
As many academic mamas do, I waited until I was (almost) tenured to try to have my children. After a...
I became a mother while a postdoctoral fellow, and solved my two-body problem shortly thereafter bec...
Pregnancy does not come easily to all women. This story shares my personal struggles with early misc...
My vision for maternity leave was quickly flipped upside down, as I had our second daughter on March...
Had I known about the grim employment statistics facing mothers in academia I might have chosen a di...
This essay shares my journey to solving the problem of timing, specifically as it applies to having ...
To combine the roles of mother, scholar, and professor means walking a precarious tight rope between...
This study investigated the lived experiences of tenure-line academic mothers using a narrative meth...
Despite becoming increasingly represented in academic departments, women scholars face a critical l...
I very recently became a math mama. In my desperate search for patterns and structure in those first...
In this essay on academic life as a mother and a mathematician, I explore pregnancy in graduate scho...
This essay collects together examples of instances where I should have advocated for myself more as ...
An important part of motherhood is having a network of support. For women in university faculty, thi...
This essay discusses the challenges of mothering four very different children--one adopted, one gift...
This proposed study looks at the experience of academic women as they combine the demanding roles of...
As many academic mamas do, I waited until I was (almost) tenured to try to have my children. After a...
I became a mother while a postdoctoral fellow, and solved my two-body problem shortly thereafter bec...
Pregnancy does not come easily to all women. This story shares my personal struggles with early misc...
My vision for maternity leave was quickly flipped upside down, as I had our second daughter on March...
Had I known about the grim employment statistics facing mothers in academia I might have chosen a di...
This essay shares my journey to solving the problem of timing, specifically as it applies to having ...
To combine the roles of mother, scholar, and professor means walking a precarious tight rope between...
This study investigated the lived experiences of tenure-line academic mothers using a narrative meth...
Despite becoming increasingly represented in academic departments, women scholars face a critical l...
I very recently became a math mama. In my desperate search for patterns and structure in those first...
In this essay on academic life as a mother and a mathematician, I explore pregnancy in graduate scho...
This essay collects together examples of instances where I should have advocated for myself more as ...
An important part of motherhood is having a network of support. For women in university faculty, thi...
This essay discusses the challenges of mothering four very different children--one adopted, one gift...
This proposed study looks at the experience of academic women as they combine the demanding roles of...