Male-dominated work environments often possess masculine cultures that are unwelcoming to women. The present work investigated whether male-dominated academic environments were characterized by gender ideologies with negative implications for women. A survey of 2622 undergraduates across a variety of academic majors examined how gender imbalance within the major corresponded with students’ gender ideologies. We hypothesized that men in male-dominated domains might justify their dominance and prototypical status by adopting gender ideologies and stereotypes that denigrate women and treat men as the normative and superior group. Confirming this hypothesis, men in increasingly male-dominated academic majors were more likely to endorse Assimila...
Academic and scientific organizations have been unable to integrate women into the ranks of tenure a...
A shift from male-majority to female-majority university campuses has opened up new areas for resear...
More men are studying and working in science fields than women. This could be an effect of the pre...
Masculine work contexts form an important source of social identity threat for working women. But wh...
Since the majority of top-level researchers are men, how does this vertical gender-segregation affec...
Since the majority of top-level researchers are men, how does this vertical gender-segregation affec...
The present research examined whether gender-science stereotypes were associated with science identi...
The present research examined a previously unexamined stereotype—that men possess more scientific tr...
Gender roles have progressed and evolved over time, with women having adopted masculine traits to a ...
This paper takes a sociological, in-depth look at contributing factors leading to women’s absence fr...
The concept of equality between men and women is a controversial and important subject for continued...
Women’s underrepresentation in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) has been link...
Historically, women have been under-represented in science disciplines. This phenomenon has been des...
Social identity threat is the notion that one of a person’s many social identities may be at risk of...
The worry or concern over confirming negative gender group stereotypes, called stereotype threat, is...
Academic and scientific organizations have been unable to integrate women into the ranks of tenure a...
A shift from male-majority to female-majority university campuses has opened up new areas for resear...
More men are studying and working in science fields than women. This could be an effect of the pre...
Masculine work contexts form an important source of social identity threat for working women. But wh...
Since the majority of top-level researchers are men, how does this vertical gender-segregation affec...
Since the majority of top-level researchers are men, how does this vertical gender-segregation affec...
The present research examined whether gender-science stereotypes were associated with science identi...
The present research examined a previously unexamined stereotype—that men possess more scientific tr...
Gender roles have progressed and evolved over time, with women having adopted masculine traits to a ...
This paper takes a sociological, in-depth look at contributing factors leading to women’s absence fr...
The concept of equality between men and women is a controversial and important subject for continued...
Women’s underrepresentation in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) has been link...
Historically, women have been under-represented in science disciplines. This phenomenon has been des...
Social identity threat is the notion that one of a person’s many social identities may be at risk of...
The worry or concern over confirming negative gender group stereotypes, called stereotype threat, is...
Academic and scientific organizations have been unable to integrate women into the ranks of tenure a...
A shift from male-majority to female-majority university campuses has opened up new areas for resear...
More men are studying and working in science fields than women. This could be an effect of the pre...