Exploratory Investigation of Gender Differences in School Psychology Publishing Before and During the Initial Phase of COVID-19

Author:

Harris Bryn1ORCID,Sullivan Amanda L.2,Embleton Paul1,Shaver Elizabeth2,Nguyen Thuy2ORCID,Kim Jiwon2,St. Clair Koryn2,Williams Shayna2

Affiliation:

1. University of Colorado Denver, USA

2. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA

Abstract

Although many disciplines saw increases in manuscript submissions coinciding with lockdown measures, numerous studies have documented widening gender gaps in academic productivity. Chi-squared analyses of gendered trends in first author manuscript submission in three school psychology journals during the initial phase of COVID-19 compared to the same time frame in the preceding 3 years did not reveal any significant associations. There was a significant increase over time in the gender gap, with a trend of more female authors than male authors. Women school psychology researchers may not have experienced similar detriments to productivity as in other disciplines, or such detriments were not reflected in submission patterns during this time frame. Limitations of the study and implications for school psychology are provided.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology

Reference11 articles.

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