Promoting Gender Equality |
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5 latest newsNo gender points for male nursing students![]() In March, the Norwegian Nurses Organisation voiced its support for giving gender points to men who want to become nurses. Now the Ministry of Education and Research has given its response: There are no plans at this time to introduce such a measure. (03.09.2010) Read moreSweden ends the use of preferential treatment![]() Gender will no longer count when students are admitted to Swedish universities and university colleges. Sweden’s Minister for Higher Education and Research Tobias Krantz says that preferential treatment based on gender has hit talented female students especially hard. (13.08.2010) Read moreGender equality efforts yield results![]() Four of the five women who took part in the promotion course at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) in 2008 were promoted to full professor this year. May Thorseth is one of them. (18.06.2010) Read moreA call for binding measures![]() Luisa Prista of the European Commission does not want to “fix” female researchers. It is the institutions and research system that need to be changed, she believes. Her goal is that the Member States will be mobilized to care about gender equality in research. (19.05.2010) Read moreHave women scored a knockout over men?![]() Women are taking over the universities, according to the newspapers. But just because the majority of students are women, does this necessarily mean that women will eventually dominate the academic disciplines? (29.04.2010) Read more |
Change from the top downWhat does it take to change the gender balance in the most male-dominated physical sciences? This is an issue that Jan Petter Hansen of the University of Bergen knows a lot about. Under his leadership, the percentage of women in the Department of Physics and Technology is finally on the rise. Jan Petter Hansen is head of the Department of Physics and Technology. (Photo: Marte Ericsson Ryste)The Science Building - a 47,000 square metre cement block – looks out over the city of Bergen, bringing to mind Eastern Europe before the fall of the wall. This has been a male bastion of research, where most of the academic fields have consisted of almost 100 percent men. The predominance of men is reflected in everyday practicalities, such as larger restrooms for men than for women. But this is about to change. “I have taken gender equality into account ever since I started in my position six years ago,” says Jan Petter Hansen, head of the Department of Physics and Technology at the University of Bergen. At that time only one woman was employed as a professor in the department. Today four more women have been hired in academic positions, and new, promising female doctoral and post-doctoral research fellows are in the system. “It’s clear to me that if we want to recruit the researchers of the future, the best researchers, we have a much better chance of getting a hold of them if we can choose from among the entire population. And then the students who come here need to see that we have female lecturers who teach the subject and that physics is not a discipline for only half the population,” he continues. The Science Building at the University of Bergen. (Photo: Kristian Harms)
Academic strategyWhat will it take to increase the percentage of women in the hard sciences such as physics and technology? Gender equality must be incorporated into the academic strategy, according to Jan Petter Hansen. (Photo: Marte Ericsson Ryste)ChallengesIn reality, it can be difficult to recruit women applicants, regardless of how well qualified they are believed to be. Hansen thinks it is important to be prepared to face opposition and challenges within the academic community. Rector Sigmund Grønmo of the University of Bergen has identified gender equality as a crucial initiative at the institution. (Photo: Hannah Helseth)Support from aboveHowever, Hansen feels that he has gotten good support from the top administration, noting it is crucial that the leadership backs up the efforts of the department heads who are “involved in the struggle on a daily basis”. Lack of resourcesHansen is fairly satisfied with what they have achieved in the department to improve gender balance in recent years, although he would have liked to come even farther. Translated by Connie Stultz |
![]() Series: Leadership on gender equalityDuring the autumn we will present some of the leaders from the higher education sector in Norway who have been successful in changing the gender balance in their areas. Department of Physics and TechnologyWomen account for 30 % of the post-docs and 15 % of the permanent academic staff in the department.
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