Abstract

Multiple studies have shown that women’s likelihood of receiving research funding is lower than that of their male colleagues. Thus far, all research on this gender gap in academia has focused on post-PhD academics, making it difficult to discern whether the female disadvantages in number of publications, previous grants, maternity leave, and h-indexes are at the root of the gender gap in received funding, or whether it is due to a more fundamental gender bias in academia. Therefore, we investigated whether female university students are already disadvantaged in receiving their first grant in their scientific career. We analysed data on applications (N = 2651) from 1995 to 2018 to the Leiden University International Study Fund (LISF), a fund dedicated to support students to study or conduct research abroad. We found that men and women applied equally often to the LISF. However, women had a lower success rate, which seemed to only get worse over recent years. Furthermore, male and female applications were assessed to be equal in quality when gender-related information was removed from them. The current study demonstrates that the factors that were assumed to contribute the most to the gender gap in more senior academics (e.g. previous grants, h-index) do not explain it fully: even when those factors do not yet play a role, such as in our student sample, women were found to have lower success rates than men. This underscores the importance of attacking gender biases at its roots.

Highlights

  • In the twenty-first century, women are still underrepresented in high positions in academia (European Commission, 2016)

  • We investigated whether the success rate of receiving a Leiden University International Study Fund (LISF) grant differed between male and female applicants, by performing a binomial generalised linear mixed model (GLMM) with gender as a fixed factor and the decision as dependent variable, with year added as a random factor

  • We asked whether the above-mentioned differences in career success between men and women rely on a sequence of events, or on a more fundamental, institutionalised gender bias in academia, i.e. are female students already disadvantaged in receiving what is in all probability their first grant in their scientific career?

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Summary

Introduction

In the twenty-first century, women are still underrepresented in high positions in academia (European Commission, 2016). They advance to higher positions more slowly than men do and leave scientific careers in disproportionate numbers To assess whether the existing gender patterns in academia are the result of a fundamental gender bias, the current study addresses whether gender differences are already of influence amongst (under)graduate students (pre-PhD level) applying for a grant to fund a study-related stay abroad

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