Perceived research productivity of women in higher education: An investigation of the impact of COVID‐19

Author:

Ermiş‐Mert Aslı1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology College of Social Sciences and Humanities Koç University İstanbul Türkiye

Abstract

AbstractThis study focuses on the predictors of women academics' perceived research productivity during the pandemic in Türkiye, by taking the changes in paid and unpaid workload alongside the felt pressure concerning productivity into consideration. Predicting the odds to report an above the mean level of decrease in perceived research productivity, unlike expected, increased housework time and administrative workload presented no statistically significant effect. On the other hand, extended care responsibilities (including but not limited to childcare) and felt pressure concerning research performance during the pandemic strongly predicted a high level of reported decrease in research productivity. Findings highlight that institutional care support mechanisms should be among the primary concerns since the pandemic has made the already existing gender inequalities in academia more visible in terms of the challenges women face in balancing paid and unpaid work. In addition, as excess pressure felt by women academics regarding research performance is linked to a decline in reported productivity, creating a compassionate environment in academia not only in unprecedented circumstances but at all times needs to be priority.

Funder

Türkiye Bilimsel ve Teknolojik Araştırma Kurumu

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference30 articles.

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