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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhen Teamwork Doesn’t Work for Women
. . .While women in the field publish as much as men, they are twice as likely to perish. And this higher rate for women being denied tenure persists even after accounting for differences in tenure rates across universities, the different subfields of economics that women work in, the quality of their publications and other influences that may have changed over time.
But Ms. Sarsons discovered one group of female economists who enjoyed the same career success as men: those who work alone. Specifically, she says that women who solo author everything have roughly the same chance of receiving tenure as a man. So any gender differences must be because of the differential treatment of men and women who work collaboratively.
Here is where it gets interesting. When an economist writes a paper on her own, there is no question about who deserves the credit. Each additional solo research paper raises the probability of getting tenure by about 8 or 9 percent, she calculated. The career benefit from publishing a solo paper is about the same for women as it is for men. But unlike women, men also get just as much credit for collaborative research, and there is no statistical difference in the career prospects of authors of individually written papers and those of papers written as part of a research team.
Unfortunately for women, research done with a co-author counts far less. When women write with co-authors, the benefit to their career prospects is much less than half that accorded to men. This really matters, because most economic research is done with co-authors.
But Ms. Sarsons discovered one group of female economists who enjoyed the same career success as men: those who work alone. Specifically, she says that women who solo author everything have roughly the same chance of receiving tenure as a man. So any gender differences must be because of the differential treatment of men and women who work collaboratively.
Here is where it gets interesting. When an economist writes a paper on her own, there is no question about who deserves the credit. Each additional solo research paper raises the probability of getting tenure by about 8 or 9 percent, she calculated. The career benefit from publishing a solo paper is about the same for women as it is for men. But unlike women, men also get just as much credit for collaborative research, and there is no statistical difference in the career prospects of authors of individually written papers and those of papers written as part of a research team.
Unfortunately for women, research done with a co-author counts far less. When women write with co-authors, the benefit to their career prospects is much less than half that accorded to men. This really matters, because most economic research is done with co-authors.
THE REST:
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/10/upshot/when-teamwork-doesnt-work-for-women.html?emc=eta1&_r=0
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When Teamwork Doesn’t Work for Women (Original Post)
Triana
Jan 2016
OP
NV Whino
(20,886 posts)1. Is that coauthored with men or women?
Didn't read the article, but I'd be willing to bet the majority of coauthoring was done with men.
Triana
(22,666 posts)2. It says when co-authoring is done with men, women get less/no recognition. n/t
See, I didn't even have to read the article to know that.
Lucky Luciano
(11,253 posts)4. I wonder if who you co-author a paper with matters.
If I co-author a paper with Janet Yellen, it will look a bit like I am riding her coattails - maybe I grabbed and analyzed data she needed for the research etc. no doubt Yellen would be the noted author among us!
That said - interesting research by the gender studies researchers.