Women and Mathematics

March 3, 2008

Remarkable Women in Science

Filed under: Portraits of living women mathematicians — Dusanka Perisic @ 12:19 pm

American Association for the Advancement of Science has published a booklet “Remarkable Women in Science”

We would like to drive your attention to the article:

Staying Power!

Have You Got What It Takes?

by Jennifer McElwain

If you are fascinated by science,

then a career in research is a great

choice for you. Women scientists

from around the world share six key

steps they have taken in order to

achieve their goals and dreams.

Step 1. Get the money

Jennifer McElwain has been fascinated by

science since her childhood in Ireland. Her

father was a chemical engineer, her mother

a keen gardener. “I knew the Latin names

of all the plants at the age of three. It was

seeded early.” After her Ph.D. Jennifer went

to the United States where she worked

at the Field Museum in Chicago, studying

the fossils of plants that had lived on Earth

millions of years ago. She also had fun with

organizing special events such as visits for

school children.

After 14 years, however, she was ready to

go for a higher position, and also longed

to return home, together with her scientist

husband and young daughter. She had to

face two challenges: find not only a position

back in Ireland, but also the funds to pay for

her research. The first she tackled by getting

a lectureship at University College Dublin

(UCD), bringing with her the skills and

techniques she had developed while in

the United States. The second hurdle

she overcame by winning a Marie Curie

Excellence award for €1.75 million. “It’s

been amazing to come back to Ireland

to a fast-track at UCD. I’m setting up a

really exciting lab on campus—all custom

designed.” Jennifer’s lab will mimic

changes that happened in the Earth’s

atmosphere 200 million years ago, to

test how similar changes linked to global

warming could affect today’s plants and

animals. Her award supports a team of

two postdocs and two Ph.D. students,

as well as securing a promise from

the university to take over the cost of

her salary.

Step 2. Get the training—even if it means having to travel far

Training abroad was a critical early step for Aderoju Osowole,

currently at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria. In 1998,

while a Ph.D. student, she won an award from the Third

World Academy of Sciences to travel to the Indian Institute of

Science’s Department of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry in

Bangalore.

“The Indian laboratories were well equipped and maintained,

with constant electricity and water supplies, even at weekends

and public holidays. In contrast, in Nigeria the dearth of

research facilities and constant power failures have impaired

our activities as researchers. Consequently we have spent

more time on teaching than on research.”

After returning to Nigeria, Aderoju was able to set up an

inorganic chemistry research unit at the University of Ibadan.

More recently, she traveled to Germany for further training

in physics on a George Forster Fellowship from the Alexander

von Humboldt Foundation. She believes that women

scientists have the ability to succeed. “Nowadays, women

scientists [in Nigeria] are held in high esteem, unlike before,

because experience has shown that women are diligent,

hardworking, and go-getters.”

Step 3. Get networking

“Women need to learn the importance of building national

and international networks, which they can begin by participating

at international conferences from an early stage and

by seeking out a mentor,” says Dolores J. Cahill, professor

at University College Dublin Conway Institute of Biomolecular

and Biomedical Research, Ireland.

Dolores left Ireland directly after her Ph.D. and spent 10

years in Germany, mainly at the Max-Planck Institute of

Molecular Genetics in Berlin, and was awarded a BioFuture

grant to develop protein array technology and to support the

co-founding of a proteomics company, Protagen AG.

Having returned to Ireland, Dolores is on the government’s

Advisory Science Council where she feels privileged to assist

in advancing science in Ireland. As a female she is often in

the minority, but does not feel the need to make an issue of

it. “Women should be noted for their scientific contribution

rather than the fact that they may be the only woman at

a meeting.”

Step 4. Start promoting yourself

Dame Julia Higgins, professor of polymer science at Imperial

College of Science and Technology in London, remembers

having to battle with her own modesty in order to declare

herself a candidate for a professorship. The departmental

professorial panel had nominated other candidates who

seemed to them to have better or more urgent cases, but

the Head of Department didn’t hesitate to support Julia’s

case once she had put herself forward. “Women tend to be

less definite about whether they ought to be pushing forward

for promotion—they don’t push themselves in appropriate

ways and they’re not as well networked as men, and therefore

less well informed.” Ironically, Julia notes that at Imperial,

those women who go for promotion are more successful

than the men.

Determined to help other women scientists, Julia has

helped to initiate new recruitment policies at Imperial to

make the process of applying for senior positions less

intimidating, particularly to women, and she has worked

with the Athena Project to encourage universities across

the United Kingdom to attract more women scientists to

top university posts. When she first became a professor

there were few other women faculty around her. “I felt rather

obvious and possibly a bit isolated, but it didn’t make me

want to stop, because it was all so interesting.”

Step 5. Find role models

Getting to know other senior women scientists

is a good way to overcome self-doubt,

according to Aoife Moloney, a lecturer at the

School of Electronic and Communications

Engineering, Dublin Institute of Technology

in Ireland. “A lot of women I know working in

engineering think they’re not great at engineering.

The men are more confident.” The

answer, she says, is to find role models. “I’ve

met a lot of women engineers who are two

or three years ahead of me and they say they

think they could be better, too. It’s good if you

hear that.” Keen to encourage other women

to take up engineering, she organizes parties

and educational events, as well as visiting

days for secondary schools.

Step 6. Plan your career

Many women scientists find that the very time at which they are ready to go for promotion is

also when they wish to start a family. Careful career planning—about both where to work, and

when to have a baby—is essential. For Lucia Reining, taking up a permanent position as a

researcher, and later director of research, at the French National Research Centre in a laboratory

of the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris was a key move in enabling her to combine having a

family with a career in physics. Lucia was only two weeks away from giving birth to her first

child when she interviewed for the position. She later had twin girls, and is now the head of

a team of 20 researchers, as well as the president of an international group, the European

Theoretical Spectroscopy Facility. The work requires a lot of time spent on administration and

finance as well as science, which can be stressful. “If I had not had the permanent position,

the probability that I would have given up at some point would have been extremely high.”

For Kate Nobes, a reader at the University of Bristol, UK, the question of whether or not she

could allow herself to have a second child had to be carefully balanced with the demands

of publishing academic papers. “It is a competitive job and if you want to compete you have

to work all hours.” Securing the lectureship in Bristol, and the job security that came with it,

enabled Kate to follow through with her long-term family plans.

Getting to know other senior

women scientists is a good

way to overcome self-doubt.

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