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Science World, High School Girls, and the Prospect of Scientific Careers, 1957–1963

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Sevan G. Terzian*
Affiliation:
School of Teaching and Learning and Coordinator of the Social Foundations of Education Masters and Doctoral programs at the University of Florida

Extract

A host of scholars have illuminated the ways in which schools and other institutions have created and then sustained a vast gender gap in the scientific professions. Many of these studies have focused on overt discrimination: deliberate efforts by men to prevent the entry of women into scientific pursuits. Others have identified subtle and culturally mediated processes that have often led girls away from scientific courses and careers. This article examines rhetorically lofty, but qualified, efforts to encourage women's interest in science, and it demonstrates how even these attempts may have contributed to the gender gap in the scientific professions. Specifically, it focuses on the portrayal of women scientists in a high school science magazine, Science World, and analyzes its ambiguous messages to high school girls about the possibility of careers in science. This essay employs ideas about curricular self-selection and the formulation of career aspirations in interpreting the depiction of female scientists in issues from the time of the magazine's founding in 1957 to 1963, the year Betty Friedan published The Feminine Mystique and the symbolic dawn of the liberal feminist movement. During these years, the United States government funded numerous educational initiatives in response to the Soviet Union's launching of Sputnik to attract more students to the scientific professions. In addition, professional scientists revised high school curricula in physics and biology to foster public rationality, critical thinking, and greater appreciation of scientific inquiry. The late postwar era also marked the beginning of greater female participation in the sciences.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2006 by the History of Education Society 

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References

1 According to the National Council for Research on Women, in 1996 women received only 19 percent of undergraduate degrees in physics and 18 percent of undergraduate degrees in engineering. In 1997, only 22 percent of Ph.D.s in physics and 12 percent in engineering were earned by women. As of 2001, less than 10 percent of full professors in the physical sciences were women, and only 12 percent of scientists and engineers in business and industry were women. See the National Council for Research on Women website: www.ncrw.org/research/scifacts.htm (accessed March 19, 2004).Google Scholar

2 Focusing on undergraduate and doctoral programs from 1940–1972, Margaret Rossiter found that although federal officials occasionally called for greater female participation in scientific fields (ostensibly to strengthen the technical manpower of the nation amid the Cold War), most women were relegated to modest roles as science teachers or laboratory assistants. Margaret W. Rossiter, Women Scientists in America: Before Affirmative Action 1940–1912 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995), xv-xviii & 50–68. See also, Donna B. Jeffe, “About Girls’ ‘Difficulties’ in Science: A Social, Not a Personal, Matter,” Teachers College Record 97 (Winter 1995): 199–226; Jonathan R. Cole, Fair Science: Women in the Scientific Community (New York: Free Press, 1979); and Londa L. Schiebinger, “The History and Philosophy of Women in Science: A Review Essay,” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 12 (Winter 1987): 305–332.Google Scholar

3 In suggesting that the biggest leak in the educational pipeline appears before girls begin college, Marsha Lakes Matyas’ study of 9–14 year old girls found a conflict between their perceptions of scientific careers as masculine (particularly in the physical sciences) and prevailing cultural perceptions of females as emotional, subjective, and dependent—qualities often considered incompatible with those needed for success in science. Similarly, James Daniel Lee discovered that popular impressions of science as individualistic, tough, unemotional, and inanimate conflicted with girls’ self-perceptions as “feminine” (soft, emotional, and wanting to work with people). Both found that the discrepancy between girls’ “self-concepts” and their perceptions of science careers diminished their professional aspirations in those areas. Marsha Lakes Matyas, “Factors Affecting Female Achievement and Interest in Science and Scientific Careers,” in Women in Science: A Report from the Field, ed. Jane Butler Kahle (Philadelphia: Falmer Press, 1985); James Daniel Lee, “Which Kids Can ‘Become’ Scientists? Effects of Gender, Self-Concepts, and Perception of Scientists,” Social Psychology Quarterly 61 (September 1998): 199–219. See also, Leslie A. Barber, “U.S. Women in Science and Engineering, 1960–1990: Progress toward Equity?” Journal of Higher Education 66 (March-April 1995): 213–234; Alice S. Rossi, “Women in Science: Why So Few?,” Science 148 (May 28, 1965, 674): 1196–1202; Lois Arnold, “Marie Curie Was Great, But…,” School Science and Mathematics 75 (November 1975): 577–584.Google Scholar

4 Rossiter's examination of the disjuncture between the lofty rhetoric and limited opportunities surrounding the call for greater “scientific womanpower” in the 1950s focuses largely on institutions of higher education. This paper builds on her analysis by focusing on a similar discrepancy that appeared earlier in the educational pipeline—in messages to high school girls.Google Scholar

5 This timeframe also allows me to analyze a nearly complete set of Science World issues: 100 out of the first 104 issues in volumes 1–13. The most complete set of issues of Science World can be found in the Adams Reading Room at the Library of Congress.Google Scholar

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11 Metraux, Mead and asked their participants if they could envision themselves as professional scientists, but they gave them the option of answering whether they could envision marrying a professional scientist. Most girls (and a few boys) answered the latter question.Google Scholar

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22 Fish Sleuth—Dr. Evelyn Shaw (p. 20),” Science Teacher's World 7 (1), 3 February 1960, 2T.Google Scholar

23 Gudemann, FrancesDr. Evelyn Shaw…Fish Sleuth,“ Science World 7 (1), 3 February 1960, 20.Google Scholar

24 Rossiter, Women Scientists in America, 34 76, 78, 81–82, 97–105, 128–131, 152, and 196; Tolley, The Science Education of American Girls, 196–208; Burkam et al., “Gender and Science Learning Early in High School,” 298–300.Google Scholar

25 “Atomic Explorer,” Science Teacher's World 7(3), 2 March 1960, 2T.Google Scholar

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31 “They put chemistry to work,” Science World, 2(3), 22 October 1957, 22.Google Scholar

32 Ibid., 23.Google Scholar

33 Harvey, E.H. Jr., “Explorers of the body,” Science World 4 (2), 14 October 1958, 21. See also Gudemann, “Dr. Evelyn Shaw…Fish Sleuth,” 29.Google Scholar

34 “Science in the woods,” Science World 2(2), 8 October 1957, 22–23; “They study what we eat,” Science World 2(4), 5 November 1957, 26–27; “They clean up our environment,” Science World 3(3), 6 March 1958, 3(3), 20–21; “Watchdogs of the weather,” Science World 3(5), 3 April 1958, 22–23; E.H. Harvey, Jr., “Men to man the missiles,” Science World 4(1), 25 September 1958, 20–21; “Sea life but no sea,” Science World 4(8), 20 January 1959, 22–23; “Careers for Young People,” Science World 7(4), 16 March 1960, 24.Google Scholar

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42 “Will a sweet potato sprout from either end?” Science World 1(1), 5 February 1957, 15.Google Scholar

43 It is important to acknowledge, however, that some philosophers of science have argued that seemingly gender-neutral qualities such as self-motivation and skepticism are, in fact, masculine constructs of scientific inquiry. See, for instance, Evelyn Fox Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1985); Lorraine Code, What Can She Know? Feminist Theory and the Construction of Knowledge (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1991).Google Scholar

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87 There is some evidence to suggest, moreover, that fewer girls than boys read Science World, or at the very least, took an interest in writing a letter to the editor: only 70 out of the 300 letters in this sample (23 percent) were submitted by female high school students.Google Scholar