I guessed you were from the U.K.! (The "lecturer" terminology was a tip-off.)
I went to co-ed schools, but my late mother (1931-1995) was a microbiologist/toxicologist, and she got her masters and doctoral degrees when we were old enough to remember her working on classes and papers. She also faced sexism and agism in getting jobs, so I had pretty realistic ideas about women in the sciences.
What do Americans call lecturers? Is everyone a professor?
Interesting to hear about your mother (I was formerly a virologist, long long ago). I was the first member of my family to take a university degree, and the only pure scientist, so I was going it alone to some extent, though my school was very supportive.
Women in Science?
Date: 2013-10-08 06:15 pm (UTC)I guessed you were from the U.K.! (The "lecturer" terminology was a tip-off.)
I went to co-ed schools, but my late mother (1931-1995) was a microbiologist/toxicologist, and she got her masters and doctoral degrees when we were old enough to remember her working on classes and papers. She also faced sexism and agism in getting jobs, so I had pretty realistic ideas about women in the sciences.
Re: Women in Science?
Date: 2013-10-09 12:26 am (UTC)Interesting to hear about your mother (I was formerly a virologist, long long ago). I was the first member of my family to take a university degree, and the only pure scientist, so I was going it alone to some extent, though my school was very supportive.