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COUNTING DOUBLE: HOW MANY SCIENTIFIC COUPLES? - The Scientist - Magazine of the Life Sciences

COUNTING DOUBLE: HOW MANY SCIENTIFIC COUPLES? - The Scientist - Magazine of the Life Sciences Author: Elizabeth Culotta Date: September 30, 1991 Those torn between a spouse on one coast and the job of a lifetime on the other can take comfort in one fact: They aren't alone. Nationwide, there were 3.3 million dual-career couples in 1983, and the number has grown considerably since then, according to a Pennsylvania State University study on the status of women. There are no reliable data on exactly how many of those 3.3 million couples are scientists, but university and industry administrators interviewed for this story say that finding employment for spouses is becoming an increasingly important factor in hiring decisions. Of the six candidates to whom he's recently offered a job, five had professional spouses, says Lawrence Abele, dean of the college of arts and sciences at Florida State University. "I don't think a senior administrator can be successful without being accommodating to that situation. It's a reality these days," he says. The scientific societies have begun to investigate. Their surveys add statistical weight to what deans and headhunters already suspected: Scientists tend to marry each other. A 1990 study of American Physical Society members, compiled by the American Institute of Physics, found that more than http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Scientist The Scientist

COUNTING DOUBLE: HOW MANY SCIENTIFIC COUPLES? - The Scientist - Magazine of the Life Sciences

The Scientist , Volume 5 (19): 19 – Sep 30, 1991

COUNTING DOUBLE: HOW MANY SCIENTIFIC COUPLES? - The Scientist - Magazine of the Life Sciences

The Scientist , Volume 5 (19): 19 – Sep 30, 1991

Abstract

Author: Elizabeth Culotta Date: September 30, 1991 Those torn between a spouse on one coast and the job of a lifetime on the other can take comfort in one fact: They aren't alone. Nationwide, there were 3.3 million dual-career couples in 1983, and the number has grown considerably since then, according to a Pennsylvania State University study on the status of women. There are no reliable data on exactly how many of those 3.3 million couples are scientists, but university and industry administrators interviewed for this story say that finding employment for spouses is becoming an increasingly important factor in hiring decisions. Of the six candidates to whom he's recently offered a job, five had professional spouses, says Lawrence Abele, dean of the college of arts and sciences at Florida State University. "I don't think a senior administrator can be successful without being accommodating to that situation. It's a reality these days," he says. The scientific societies have begun to investigate. Their surveys add statistical weight to what deans and headhunters already suspected: Scientists tend to marry each other. A 1990 study of American Physical Society members, compiled by the American Institute of Physics, found that more than

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Publisher
The Scientist
Copyright
© 1986-2010 The Scientist
ISSN
1759-796X
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Abstract

Author: Elizabeth Culotta Date: September 30, 1991 Those torn between a spouse on one coast and the job of a lifetime on the other can take comfort in one fact: They aren't alone. Nationwide, there were 3.3 million dual-career couples in 1983, and the number has grown considerably since then, according to a Pennsylvania State University study on the status of women. There are no reliable data on exactly how many of those 3.3 million couples are scientists, but university and industry administrators interviewed for this story say that finding employment for spouses is becoming an increasingly important factor in hiring decisions. Of the six candidates to whom he's recently offered a job, five had professional spouses, says Lawrence Abele, dean of the college of arts and sciences at Florida State University. "I don't think a senior administrator can be successful without being accommodating to that situation. It's a reality these days," he says. The scientific societies have begun to investigate. Their surveys add statistical weight to what deans and headhunters already suspected: Scientists tend to marry each other. A 1990 study of American Physical Society members, compiled by the American Institute of Physics, found that more than

Journal

The ScientistThe Scientist

Published: Sep 30, 1991

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