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SPEAKING OF EDUCATION: Sisters in Science
More African American women participate in higher education than African American men, and the gap is widening. In 1995, there were 556,000 African American men enrolled as students in all institutions of higher education at all levels of matriculation, compared to 918,000 African American women. The growth in the number of African American women also exceeded the growth rate among African American men.
While the enrollment imbalance does not translate into a wage gap -- primarily because of the participation of women in typically female jobs -- the enrollment gap has socioeconomic consequences for students and for African American society at large.
Because more sisters are enrolled, more are also earning degrees at every level and in almost every field. But the gaps are narrower in some fields than others, and reflect the stereotypes and pipeline challenges that sisters face in some fields -especially in engineering and the sciences. For example, while African American women -- recipients of 53,000 bachelor's degrees in 1994 -- received 72 percent more of these degrees than the 31,000 degrees awarded to African American men, in just the biological and life sciences, the gap -- at 53 percent -- was smaller.
Is it simple propensity that has more Black women seeking degrees in education, the social sciences, and the health professions, or are sisters being subtly guided away from the sciences and into more "typically female" fields? Given the fact that African American women receive five bachelor's degrees for every three that men earn, why do they receive just...