Gender Differences in Academic Hiring

This chapter examines this critical entry point into an academic career—and its components—with a primary focus on differences in hiring outcomes for tenure-track assistant professor and tenured associate or full professor positions, and how these differences might be explained. The following research questions are addressed:

• Is gender associated with the probability of individuals applying for S&E positions in research-intensive institutions?

• Given that an individual applies for a position, does a woman have the same probability of being interviewed as a man?

• Given that an individual is interviewed for a position, does a woman have the same probability of being offered a position as a man?

As the chapter explores the impact of institutional and departmental char­acteristics, rather than the individual characteristics of potential applicants and job candidates, another way to frame the research questions is, what are the characteristics of research-intensive (Research I or RI) institutions associated with proportionately more applications from women, interviews of women, and offers to women?

The chapter is divided into five sections. We outline the hiring process with a focus on three key parts of the hiring process—applications, interviews, and offers. The final two sections describe faculty perceptions of hiring and institu­tional policies based on data from our faculty survey. A review of the relevant literature and research and what it suggests we should expect to find in our survey data can be found in Appendix 2-1.

Updated: 01.11.2015 — 06:58