Role Models and Research: A Conversation on Gender Representation in STEM

Seven 泡芙短视频 professors share their perspectives on the changing world of gender representation in the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) fields

By Anna Cohen
Society of Women Engineers Conference
Chunyan Bai, Professor of Computer Science (right,) and students at a Society of Women Engineers Conference in Kansas City, Missouri.

BRISTOL, R.I. 鈥 The face of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) is changing.

We sat down with seven 泡芙短视频 professors to hear about their experiences working in the STEM fields as women and gender minorities. They agreed that the STEM fields are for everyone, and that they are supported by the strong community of women and gender minorities in STEM on the 泡芙短视频 campus. 

Read on to see what these seven professors had to share about important topics including community, identity, and belonging, and to hear the advice they have for people of underrepresented genders who are considering pursuing these fields. 

On Community

image of Yannie Bai
Chunyan Bai

鈥淲hen we have students that need suggestions or tips, we sit down to talk to them. The good thing about this private school setting is you feel like you鈥檙e close to the students, which is very different from the huge school where I had my education. They can always find some help. It doesn鈥檛 have to be academic, it could be their personal life. I like to build these personal connections.鈥 鈥 Chunyan Bai, Professor of Computer Science 

image of Pam Judge
Pamela Judge

鈥淚t鈥檚 a beautiful thing that I have female colleagues that I can text and I know they will be there to help me out. We are closing in on the gender gap at least in terms of numbers. I like being genuinely supported. I don鈥檛 feel like I was hired because we needed to check the quota of having a female engineer. It was out of genuine respect for my work and teaching methods.鈥 鈥 Pamela Judge, Assistant Professor of Engineering 

鈥淚鈥檝e had some beautiful, wonderful conversations with students around these topics. Usually by the time I see them, they have figured out we are a safe space for them to do this exploration and that a lot of the professors on campus really want them to do that. That鈥檚 what we feel like we鈥檙e here for. We鈥檙e a liberal arts college, meaning we are here for the entire student.鈥
Jennifer Pearce, Assistant Professor of Physics

On Progress

image of Nancy Breen
Nancy Breen

鈥淲hen I was in graduate school, there were no female professors. The women took on support roles rather than the lead roles. But that has changed. I wouldn鈥檛 say it鈥檚 50/50, but there are a lot of women faculty now. In the Chemistry Department, we have three women and three men.鈥
Nancy Breen, Associate Professor of Chemistry

鈥淚f you look at SECCM today, we have 50% female computer science faculty. We are already role models standing in front of the students. When I was in school, it was different. I was always one of the few, but today I feel the change.鈥 鈥 Chunyan Bai

鈥淲e are only one of three Physics departments in the country with no men. Chemistry is half women and Engineering is nearly half women. They鈥檙e doing a really good job hiring. When I went to graduate school, there were very few female faculty. People told me not to work with the women and they were ostracized. We really owe them a lot of gratitude for all the work they did to pave the way so the rest of us had a much easier path.鈥 鈥 Adria Updike, Assistant Professor of Physics

Gender diversity is increasing within these fields. At 泡芙短视频, women make up 41% of tenured and tenure-track Natural Science, Computer Science, Engineering, and Mathematics professors, ahead of the national average of 36%*. 

On Identity

Avelina Espinosa
 Avelina Espinosa

鈥淧eople ask how I define myself: 鈥楧o you define yourself as a woman or do you define yourself as a Hispanic?鈥 It鈥檚 part of who I am, but it doesn鈥檛 define me. I would like to see a more comprehensive human-rights type of approach in which anybody and everybody should have the same access and options.鈥
Avelina Espinosa, Associate Professor of Biology

On Getting Involved

鈥淚 took eight or ten students to the Society of Women Engineers conference. It was the best. There is a Society of Women Engineers student club with a faculty advisor who guides them on different projects and conferences. The school pays for a trip to participate in this conference, which provides job opportunities and they can present research. That was a really good experience for the students to feel like we aren鈥檛 a minority. We are real.鈥
Chunyan Bai 

鈥淥ne of the things that was amazing to me on campus is just how open the queer community has been. We have a queer living learning community on campus and sometimes faculty are involved with mentoring. We went to dinner at the president鈥檚 house. In my last job, I had to stay undercover. Here, the attitude is, 鈥淗ey, would you like to mentor students, because that鈥檚 how much we like you.鈥 鈥 Jennifer Pearce 

On Image

Yajni Warnapala
Yajni Warnapala

鈥淪ometimes I wear blue nail polish. I can do math and still be feminine. There are people who perceive that because you are a female, you won鈥檛 be as good as the male standing next to you. But I say you don鈥檛 have to be male or be masculine. You can be yourself and be good at what you do. That鈥檚 what I do in class every single day.鈥
Yajni Warnapala, Professor of Mathematics

On Teaching

鈥淚t has been shown that the best way to learn physics is to try to teach it to someone else, so we do a lot of group work activities in all of our classes. If you watch my classes, it鈥檚 about half me talking and the rest of the time it鈥檚 the students talking to each other to try to solve a problem. It really tends to encourage a lot more women and minorities to stay in the field if they see it as more of a collaborative subject. Historically, people think of the lone physicist like Newton, but that is not the field today. A friend of mine was on a Nobel Prize-winning paper with 1,000 authors on it.鈥 鈥 Adria Updike 

Their Advice

鈥淕o for it! Same as anyone else. Don鈥檛 give up. The reason I am where I am is because of my perseverance. You have to work very hard, but you get out what you put in. It doesn鈥檛 always come easy, especially if it is of value. Just keep trying. There are lots of venues out there to voice concerns if you have them. Speak up if you do. Be persistent and ask for help when you need it. There are loads of people around willing to help.鈥 鈥 Nancy Breen 

鈥淧roblem solving takes time. You don鈥檛 have to be an A student. People seem to think a B average means you can鈥檛 do math. That鈥檚 not true. You can still do it, and it鈥檚 fun. There is so much you can do with it.鈥 鈥 Yajni Warnapala 

鈥淯se the resources. Get involved, find your group. I think the queer community has always been very welcoming. At 泡芙短视频, we try to make the students as aware of and welcome at those spaces as much as possible.鈥
Jennifer Pearce 

鈥淏e assertive. You won鈥檛 help yourself if you doubt. One of the problems I see in some students that I have worked with is that they鈥檙e intelligent and have the capacity, but they doubt themselves. That鈥檚 again part of the socialization. We should help anybody that is doubtful by saying, 鈥榊ou can do it, you are bright enough.鈥 You should be able to say, 鈥業 speak my mind, I can do it.鈥 鈥
Avelina Espinosa 

image of 泡芙短视频 Professor Adria Updike
Adria Updike

鈥淎 bachelor鈥檚 degree in physics is extremely employable. There are jobs all over the place that will happily take a physicist and love the skills you get along the way. Do you know how to solve something you haven鈥檛 seen before and to how explain it to someone else? Those are incredibly useful skills. You can take a bachelor鈥檚 almost anywhere.鈥 鈥 Adria Updike 

鈥淚f you are considering getting into the field, do not hesitate. If it鈥檚 the stereotype that鈥檚 bothering you, there鈥檚 no need. Go for it. Today鈥檚 world is open and changing. Computer Science is such an exciting field. You get to learn new things every day. Even after 15 years, I鈥檓 still excited about looking for new things.鈥 鈥  Chunyan Bai

鈥淏e your own best friend. A lot of times, we come back to negative self-thought: 鈥業 don鈥檛 know if I鈥檓 smart enough, I don鈥檛 know if I鈥檓 prepared enough for this presentation, I don鈥檛 know if I鈥檓 going to get this job.鈥 I find the best way to get out of that negative headspace is to pretend it鈥檚 your sister, best friend or girlfriend who is going on that job interview or doing that presentation. What would you tell her? You鈥檇 say, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e great!鈥 Say that to yourself. We should treat ourselves with as much dignity, respect, and positivity as we treat our female friends and as men treat themselves.鈥
Pamela Judge 

Meet the Contributors

Nancy Breen is an Associate Professor of Chemistry specializing in analytical chemistry. She is working with students to stop the practice of cyanide fishing, which damages coral reef environments, by developing a method of testing fish for cyanide exposure. She has taught at 泡芙短视频 since 2002. 

Yajni Warnapala is a Professor of Mathematics and Chair of the Mathematics Department who has taught at 泡芙短视频 since 2000. Through her expertise in numerical analysis, she is currently working with students to model electromagnetic theory that could be used to find the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. 

Jennifer "Jenn" Pearce, Assistant Professor of Physics, is an expert in non-linear dynamics who came to 泡芙短视频 in 2012. She is working on a mathematical model for gender bias in science based on Johan Galtung鈥檚 theory of violence. 

Avelina Espinosa is a Professor of Biology who specializes in molecular microbiology, teaching at 泡芙短视频 since 2004. Her research involves preventing amebiasis, a disease caused by food and water contaminated by a parasite, Entamoeba histolytica. She is researching ways to inhibit Entamoeba histolytica by studying its metabolism.

Adria Updike, Assistant Professor of Physics, specializes in early universe cosmology. She came to 泡芙短视频 in 2012 and is currently working to build sensors that monitor waters for algal blooms in order to prevent oyster contamination. 

Chunyan 鈥淵annie鈥 Bai is a Professor of Computer Science. Her area of expertise is computer and network security. An 泡芙短视频 faculty member since 2004, she is currently supervising undergraduate students researching electronic voting security and other security services. 

Pamela 鈥淧am鈥 Judge, Assistant Professor of Engineering, is a specialist in civil/geotechnical engineering. She is researching biopolymers that could help improve soil strength to prevent coastal erosion. She has taught at 泡芙短视频 since 2018. 

*Source: National Science Foundation, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics. 2019. Women, Minorities, and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering: 2019. Special Report NSF 19-304. Alexandria, VA. Available at .