Children and the Productivity of Academic Women

Abstract
This study examines the relationship between child rearing and the scholarly productivity of women in academia. Using, first, recent data collected by the Carnegie-American Council on Education and a multivariate statistical analysis, we find that, overall: (1) women faculty publish somewhat less than men; and (2) there is no evidence that child rearing is related to the number of publications of academic women. Further, using newly secured data we compared women academics who are considered “outstanding” by their peers with “other” women academics, and found no evidence that childrearing decreases the probability of a women academic being in the “outstanding,” high status group.

This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit: