For the first time, more women than men in the United States received doctoral degrees last year, the culmination of decades of change in the status of women at colleges nationwide.
culmination n. 顶点;高潮
The number of women at every level of academia has been rising for decades. Women now hold a nearly 3-to-2 majority in undergraduate and graduate education. Doctoral study was the last holdout - the only remaining area of higher education that still had an enduring male majority.
Of the doctoral degrees awarded in the 2008-09 academic year, 28,962 went to women and 28,469 to men, according to an annual enrollment report from the Council of Graduate Schools, based in Washington.
Doctoral degrees, which require an average of seven years study, are typically the last to show the impact of long-term changes. It is a trend that has been snaking its way through the educational pipeline, said Nathan Bell, the reports author and the director of research and policy analysis for the council. It was bound to happen.
pipeline n. 管道;输油管;传递途径
be bound to 注定;必然;一定要
Women have long outnumbered men in earning masters degrees, especially in education. Women earned nearly six in 10 graduate degrees in 2008-09, according to the new report, which is based on an annual survey of graduate institutions.
outnumber vt. 数目超过;比多
But women who aspired to become college professors, a common path for those with doctorates, were hindered by the particular demands of faculty life. Studies have found that the tenure clock often collides with the biological clock: The busiest years of the academic career are the years that well-educated women tend to have children.
aspire vi. 渴望;立志;追求
hinder vi. 成为阻碍 vt. 阻碍;打扰 adj. 后面的
collide with 冲突;碰撞
Many women feel they have to choose between having a career in academics and having a family, said Catherine Hill, director of research at the American Association of University Women. Of course, they shouldnt have to.
Undergraduate women began reaching parity with men in the early 1980s as societal barriers to female scholarship fell away. And then they eclipsed men - so thoroughly that federal officials are now investigating whether some liberal arts schools are favoring men in admissions to preserve some semblance of gender balance.
eclipse vt. 使黯然失色;形成蚀 n. 日蚀,月蚀;黯然失色
A freshman seminar at the University of Iowa called Graduate School: Is It for You? drew 16 students last year, Associate Provost John Keller said. Fifteen of them were women.
Scholarly attention in recent years has turned to the fallen aspirations of men, who are more likely than women to drop out of high school and more apt to be diverted from higher education into menial labor or prison. Men also join the military in disproportionate numbers.
Overall, women and girls make up 51 percent of the U.S. population. But women have not conquered every corridor of the ivory tower. Men still hold the majority of faculty and administration positions. Women earn less than men at every level of academic rank, according to the American Association of University Professors. Male faculty members earned $87,206 on average and their female counterparts made $70,600 in the 2009-10 academic year. Starting salaries for newly minted faculty members are nearly equal.
Men retained the lead in doctoral degrees until 2008, largely through their dominance in engineering, mathematics and the physical sciences. They still earn nearly 80 percent of engineering doctorates.
retain vt. 保持;雇;记住
drop out 退学;缀学
be apt to 倾向于
The increase in women receiving doctoral degrees resulted from years of persistent gains across several areas of study. In the health sciences, for example, the number has risen at a rate of 14 percent per year over the past decade. Women now earn 70 percent of doctorates in that field. They represent 67 percent of doctoral degrees in education, and 60 percent in social and behavioral sciences.
The same economic forces that drove more women into the labor market sent greater numbers of them into doctoral study, aware of the increased need for them to make money for their families, Hill said.
Women approached parity with men in law and medical studies in recent years, said Jacqueline E. King, an assistant vice president at the American Council on Education. Doctoral fields couldnt be far behind, she said.
parity n. 平价;同等;相等
result from 起因于;由造成
Liz Nguyen, 25, is a doctoral candidate at the University of Maryland in chemistry, a field in which women have made gains but remain outnumbered. Many of her classmates are women, but the older generation of senior faculty is made up virtually of all men. It was always just a male-dominated field, she said.
Nguyen said the women she has met in doctoral study are very strong-willed women. I never saw women like that growing up.
Men may be staging a modest comeback. First-time enrollment in graduate education grew at a slightly faster rate for them than for women in 2009, reversing a long-term trend that has favored female enrollment. Meanwhile, the broader gender gap in higher education seems to be stabilizing. The split in enrollment and degrees remained constant through much of the past decade at about 57 percent women, according to a study King wrote this year.
reverse n. 背面;相反;倒退;失败 vt. 颠倒;倒转
split vt. 分离;使分离;劈开;离开 vi. 离开;被劈开;断绝关系
In general, higher education has expanded over the years to meet demand from both women and men, she said. I dont expect that its ever going to be all women.
Question time:
1. In the areas of higher education, which one still had an enduring male majority?
2. Why did more women than men get PhDs?
【答案】
1. Doctoral study was the only remaining area of higher education that still had an enduring male majority.
2. It was resulted from womens years of persistent gains across several areas of study. Moreover, the same economic forces that drove more women into the labor market sent greater numbers of them into doctoral study.
Practical and pragmatic “实用的”两个词的区别
Cosmonaut anniversary and wallaby internet star 宇航员周年纪念日,小袋鼠轰动互联网
Counting elephants, Australian Elvis 空中数大象,澳大利亚“猫王节”
Acknowledge and admit 两个表示“承认”单词的区别
Parcel, sack, box 包裹类词语
Zika virus, Rare whale filmed in Australia 寨卡病毒传播风险,澳大利亚拍到罕见鲸鱼影像
Almost, nearly, more or less “差不多”的三个近义词
EU after Brexit, human ancestor mystery 英脱欧公投后的欧盟,人类祖先之谜新发现
Ebola outbreak and brain injuries 埃博拉疫情,脑部创伤
Connection and link 两个表示“关系”的单词
Chinwag 闲谈-英语点津
Battery risk, Farmer anti-theft solution 纽扣电池的潜在危险,牧场主防盗有术
Ditch 和 abandon 之间的区别
Different types of hats 各种帽子的英文说法
Delhi's pollution and South Africa's solar power 新德里环境污染,南非发展太阳能
Darkness over Indonesia and the 'fifth Beatle' dies 印度尼西亚日全食,“第五位披头士”去世
Barrier, hurdle, impediment, hindrance 四个表示“障碍”单词的区别
Dangerous heartbeat, Spike Lee and the Oscars 危险的心跳,斯派克·李抵制奥斯卡
Greetings after a short break 小别后的问候
Afghanistan, cancer and athletics boss 英美支持阿富汗政府军,癌症发病原因, 国际田联官员停职
Limit 和 restrict 的区别
Zuma in court and stressed horses 南非总统受审和马的精神压力
Angelina Jolie to divorce, Karaoke star at 80 安吉丽娜·朱莉提出离婚申请,八十岁老人出唱片
Drought in Ethiopia and MS treatment 埃塞俄比亚干旱,多发性硬化治疗手段新进展
Restrain 和 constrain 的区别
Appreciate 和 recognise 之间的区别
Ten a penny 多得遍地都是
Commend 和 recommend 的区别
Simple, innocent, naive, pure 四个近义词的区别
In one ear and out the other 左耳进,右耳出
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