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APA Women in Higher Ed: Claiming Visibility and VoiceExecutive Summary of Report by Dr. Shirley Hune
IntroductionThe findings in the Association of American Colleges and Universities (AAC&U) report by Dr. Shirley Hune, Asian Pacific American Women in Higher Education: Claiming Visibility and Voice, contest a popular conception that Asian Pacific Americans in higher education, especially women, are a "model minority" and a racial "success story." APAs have yet to achieve parity with whites in access and accommodation in the academy. They experience frequent racial and gender discrimination, and their serious educational and professional issues are largely ignored. The study reveals how, treated as "outsiders" and "strangers," APA women are excluded or marginalized in organizational structures and programs. It also documents the multiple ways in which stereotypes and racial, gender, class, and cultural biases obscure APA women and their concerns and impede their academic, personal, and professional development. Highlighting "everyday inequities," the study reveals the small behaviors and informal practices of even well-intentioned individuals whom APA women encounter in colleges and universities. (The report uses the terms Asians, Asian Americans, and Asian Pacific Americans interchangeably. Author Shirley Hune argues that Asian Pacific Americans of (APAs) is more inclusive of Pacific groups, however, and better reflects the changes in the population since 1965.) The monograph is based on research studies, campus climate and diversity reports, focus group and individual interviews representing a range of colleges and universities, and the author's own participant observation in the academy over two decades. The study gives visibility to APA women and analyzes their experiences as undergraduates, graduate students, faculty, professional staff, and academic administrators. It also gives voice to APA women through quotations gathered through interviews, memoirs, and other studies. Shirley Hune is a professor of urban planning in the School of Public Policy and Social Research and an associate dean in the Graduate Division of UCLA. A third-generation APA of Chinese descent, she holds a Ph.D. in American civilization and has research interests in Asian American history, race and ethnic relations, minorities and women in higher education, and international migration and human rights policy.
Asian Pacific American Women and the AcademyAPA women have demonstrated significant increases in bachelor's, master's, and first-professional degrees earned over the past decade, but continue to lag behind their male counterparts, the report finds. They are underrepresented in many fields of study at all degree levels, in doctoral studies, as faculty, and at higher levels of academic administration. APA female faculty generally occupy the junior ranks and have one of the lowest tenure rates in the academy. It may be that APA women are especially harmed by a chilly campus climate. Other findings include:
Confronting DifferenceAs they seek to navigate the rocky terrain of higher education, APA students have shown an openess to "new" scholarly areas, such as ethnic studies, women's studies, and gay and lesbian studies, as intellectual and social spaces in an otherwise culturally alienating academic environment. They find higher education's resistance to the establishment of APA studies courses and programs a negative element in the campus climate, and are proactively seeking to address this bias and myriad other obstacles including:
A Call for RenewalIn addition to ensuring equal access to higher education, the study calls for academic institutions to broaden the definition of equity to include access through and access from institutions into a diverse national and global society. AAC&U and all who took part in producing this volume see it as valuable to administrators and faculty for whom the information is largely unfamiliar, and those already engaged in campus diversity work who will be introduced to an additional dimension. Recommendations are included to address the unequal treatment of APA women in academe and to support colleges and universities in providing a climate of access, equity, and inclusion for all.
Publication InformationAsian Pacific American Women in Higher Education is third in an AAC&U series on the status of women of color in higher education in the U.S., also including Black Women in Academe: Issues and Strategies, by Yolanda T. Moses (1989, 1997), and Hispanic Women: Making Their Presence on Campus Less Tenuous, by Sara Nieves-Squires (1991).
Summary prepared by Association of American Colleges & Universities, printed here with permission. Shirley Hune is a professor of urban planning in the School of Public Policy and Social Research and an associate dean in the Graduate Division of UCLA. |
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