Welcome, Jeanne Lovy!

Screen Shot 2018-12-19 at 7.49.43 PMLots of people, from Work-Life to the Diversity Leadership Council, have advocated for years to create a leadership position for coordinating child care . This week, Jeanne Lovy joins JHU in this role. Welcome!

There are so many important aspects to this appointment that we are going to quote at some length from the HUB below. Enjoy!

Lovy is also thinking more broadly about how Hopkins can build new relationships—possibly formal ones—with other programs in and around Baltimore. One big question, she says, is “How can we support and improve child care for all in the community, in a way that helps not only Hopkins but also its neighbors?”

With all of this, Lovy understands that affordability is a big concern for a lot of families. Currently, child care vouchers of up to $5,000 a year are available for families of certain incomes, but Hopkins will be investigating further options.

In addition, Lovy says, “We’re excited that we were recently able to expand the dependent care voucher program to eligible students, and we’re evaluating that and other programs for their impact.”

Beyond those fundamentals, Lovy wants to expand and diversify the kinds of family-oriented programming Hopkins can provide or refer employees to—things such as tutoring, enrichment programs, day trips, and summer camps. She’s looking into family counseling options, too, and ways that Hopkins could help parents with school selection.

Image: https://hub.jhu.edu/at-work/2018/12/17/jeanne-lovy-director-of-family-support-services/

We’ve updated our file cabinet

cabinet-2027625_1280 Hoping we might learn something from Dartmouth? Curious about critiques of student evaluations of teaching? Perhaps you want to read the NAS report for yourself, or JHU Vision 2020, the Columbia equity report on tenure-line faculty, or the American Physical Society LGBTQ+ Climate Report. . . . The Women Faculty Forum File Cabinet is always there for you. We just freshened it up, in fact.

 

Come browse anytime, and please email us suggestions for additions at [email protected].

Kid Friendly!

Today’s post: some happy news for kids and the grownups who love them.Screen Shot 2018-12-13 at 9.42.56 PM

Starting Dec 1, JHU offers grad students and postdocs some support for child care. The HUB reports:

Provost Sunil Kumar and Heidi Conway, vice president for human resources, shared the news in an email to eligible individuals, saying, “In order to pursue excellence together, we recognize the need to support the well-being of both our direct affiliates and their families as we all balance responsibilities at Johns Hopkins and at home.”

Hopkins grad Eva Chen (A&S ’01) has published a children’s book, Juno Valentine and the Magical Shoes. From the HUB:

Juno follows a young girl on an adventure through time to find a lost pair of shoes. Though the book is superficially about a search for the perfect footwear, Chen wanted to push beyond the princess trope: Throughout Juno’s quest she tries on shoes that belong to trailblazing women in history—from Cleopatra to Frida Kahlo to Serena Williams—and is transported into their worlds. In the end, Juno decides she’s happiest with her own shoes.

image: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1250297265?tag=macmillan-20

PhD Student Advisory Committee

As we wrote in our last post: Only courageous talk and earnest listening–followed by proactive, systemic change enacted by men and all other genders–will dislodge the cultural norms that allow nearly 3/5 of women scientists to be sexually harassed and allow gender harassment to permeate our culture, on campus and off.

Toward that end: the new PhD Student Advisory Committee, convened by Vice Provost for Graduate and Professional Education Nancy Kass. Mentorship, inclusivity, and grad student well-being were key topics discussed at their first meeting, held at the end of November. From the Hub: “We get these amazing students, and we want them to be productive, and happy, and feel good about what they’re doing, and then be prepared to do really wonderful things afterwards,” Kass says.

 

These stories are for everyone

Screen Shot 2018-11-28 at 4.05.14 PMLast Wednesday, the Women Faculty Forum hosted a faculty coffee hour to discuss graduate student advising. It was a terrific discussion; over the course of two hours, 25 faculty members and administrative leaders (from KSAS, WSE, and the Provost’s office) joined in. Gratitude, again, to the KSAS deans for sponsoring the event.

Two days later, we began to see signs around campus expressing concern about graduate student safety as well as the OIE complaint process.

From every angle, this is a painful situation.

However, we are not without means to address it. On the contrary: the Hopkins community has the tools and resources to rethink how we approach gender equity, from cultural shifts in our everyday interactions all the way to Title IX cases.

At the 2018 Frankfurt Book Fair this past October, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (MA in Writing Sems, 2004) gave the keynote. A brief excerpt:

All over the world today, women are speaking up, but their stories are still not really heard. It is time for us to pay more than lip service to the fact that women’s stories are for everyone, not just women. We know from studies that women read books by men and women, but men read books by men. It is time for men to read women.

Hence our title, “These stories are for everyone.” Only courageous talk and earnest listening–followed by proactive, systemic change enacted by men and all other genders–will dislodge the cultural norms that allow nearly 3/5 of women scientists to be sexually harassed and allow gender harassment to permeate our culture, on campus and off.

In the spirit, then, of facilitating conversation and action toward a more diverse, inclusive academic culture, we are using this post to remind ourselves and our colleagues of the work that’s already been done. Good, practical ideas for faculty-student interactions or institutional discrimination processes are no secret. This should be our starting point for improving gender equity at Homewood.

So, next steps:

1. Starting now, establish norms that support a diverse, inclusive culture for graduate students and postdocs

  1. Mentoring Grad Students: Advising Statements (Chronicle 2018)
  2. Kathleen E. Grogan, “How the entire scientific community can confront gender bias in the workplace” (Nature Ecology & Evolution 2018)
  3. Leonard Cassuto, “On the Value of Dissertation Writing Groups” (Chronicle 2018)
  4. Allison Antes, “First law of leadership: be human first, scientist second” (Nature 2018)
  5. Leah H. Somerville, “What Can We Learn from Dartmouth?” (Science 2018)
  6. K.A. Amienne, “Abusers and Enablers in Faculty Culture” (Chronicle 2017)
  7. Suggestions for how to “diffuse the hierarchical and dependent relationship between trainees and faculty” at JHU (2018)

NAS RECOMMENDATION 5: Diffuse the hierarchical and dependent relationship between trainees and faculty.

Academic institutions should consider power-diffusion mechanisms (i.e., mentoring networks or committee-based advising and departmental funding rather than funding only from a principal investigator) to reduce the risk of sexual harassment.

RECOMMENDATION 9: Incentivize change.

  1. Academic institutions should work to apply for awards from the emerging STEM Equity Achievement (SEA Change) program.3 Federal agencies and private foundations should encourage and support academic institutions working to achieve SEA Change awards.
  2. Accreditation bodies should consider efforts to create diverse, inclusive, and respectful environments when evaluating institutions or departments.
  1. Federal agencies should incentivize efforts to reduce sexual harassment in academia by requiring evaluations of the research environment, funding research and evaluation of training for students and faculty (including bystander intervention), supporting the development and evaluation of leadership training for faculty, and funding research on effective policies and procedures.

2. Balance transparency, privacy, and efficiency in discrimination cases

  1. Emma Pettit, “In Sexual Misconduct Cases, Colleges Weigh Privacy Against Transparency” (Chronicle 2016)
  2. Diva Parekh, “On Their Own: Eight survivors of sexual violence share their stories and how the University handled their cases” (JHU News-Letter 2018)
  3. Marina N. Rosenthal, Alec M. Smidt, and Jennifer J. Freyd, “Still Second Class: Sexual Harassment of Graduate Students” (Psychology of Women Quarterly 2017)

    NAS RECOMMENDATION 4: Improve transparency and accountability.

    1. Academic institutions need to develop—and readily share—clear, accessible, and consistent policies on sexual harassment and standards of behavior. They should include a range of clearly stated, appropriate, and escalating disciplinary consequences for perpetrators found to have violated sexual harassment policy and/or law. The disciplinary actions taken should correspond to the severity and frequency of the harassment. The disciplinary actions should not be something that is often considered a benefit for faculty, such as a reduction in teaching load or time away from campus service responsibilities. Decisions regarding disciplinary actions, if indicated or required, should be made in a fair and timely way following an investigative process that is fair to all sides.2
    2. Academic institutions should be as transparent as possible about how they are handling reports of sexual harassment. This requires balancing issues of confidentiality with issues of transparency. Annual reports, that provide information on (1) how many and what type of policy violations have been reported (both informally and formally), (2) how many reports are currently under investigation, and (3) how many have been adjudicated, along with general descriptions of any disciplinary actions taken, should be shared with the entire academic community: students, trainees, faculty, administrators, staff, alumni, and funders. At the very least, the results of the investigation and any disciplinary action should be shared with the target(s) and/or the person(s) who reported the behavior.
    3. Academic institutions should be accountable for the climate within their organization. In particular, they should utilize climate surveys to further investigate and address systemic sexual harassment, particularly when surveys indicate specific schools or facilities have high rates of harassment or chronically fail to reduce rates of sexual harassment
    4. Academic institutions should consider sexual harassment equally important as research misconduct in terms of its effect on the integrity of
    research. They should increase collaboration among offices that oversee the integrity of research (i.e., those that cover ethics, research misconduct, diversity, and harassment issues); centralize resources, information, and expertise; provide more resources for handling complaints and working with targets; and implement sanctions on researchers found guilty of sexual harassment.

3. Take a Comprehensive Approach to Prevention

  1. Yale University, “Preventing and Responding to Sexual Harassment: Building a Climate of Safety and Respect at Yale”
  2. Jessica Sales and Kathleen Krause, “Schools must include faculty and staff in sexual violence prevention efforts” (Journal of American College Health 2017)
  3. Carrie A. Moylan and McKenzie Javorka, “Widening the Lens: An Ecological Review of Campus Sexual Assault” (Trauma, Violence, and Abuse 2018)

     

    NAS RECOMMENDATION 15: Make the entire academic community responsible for reducing and preventing sexual harassment.

    All members of our nation’s college campuses—students, trainees, faculty, staff, and administrators—as well as members of research and training sites should assume responsibility for promoting civil and respectful education, training, and work environments, and stepping up and confronting those whose behaviors and actions create sexually harassing environments.

4. Create opportunities to discuss gender harassment

  1. How a Department Took on the Next Frontier in the #MeToo Movement” (Chronicle 2018)
  2. What It’s Like to Be a Woman in the Academy (Chronicle 2018; short essays, each a potential discussion topic or “case study”)

5. Offer institutional support for victims, separate from investigation

NAS RECOMMENDATION 6: Provide support for the target.

Academic institutions should convey that reporting sexual harassment is an honorable and courageous action. Regardless of a target filing a formal report, academic institutions should provide means of accessing support services (social services, health care, legal, career/professional). They should provide alternative and less formal means of recording information about the experience and reporting the experience if the target is not comfortable filing a formal report. Academic institutions should develop approaches to prevent the target from experiencing or fearing retaliation in academic settings.

Finally, many thanks to Yale Faculty Forum for their impressive searchable bibliography of  “over 640 references of recent research about women in higher education, including the following topics: gender bias in the academy, tenure rates and challenges, balancing work and family, diversity, mentoring, hiring practices, women in the sciences, gender studies, institutional reports, and experiences of junior faculty.” Check it out!