http://www.chabotcollege.edu/faculty/shildreth/astronomy/06gender.html
25 points plus significant extra credit
available -
Due Thursday 3/25/10 in
class at 10:30 AM or on ASTROPORTAL
HW#6
|
One of the many benefits of the 'Picture an Astronomer' activity you did in the "Nature of Science" assignment is that it can be very revealing about our unstated biases, and not just about gender roles! It also can illuminate a bit about stereotypes of all kinds -- ethnic, behavioral, and academic. And it is fun! We are so strongly influenced by the media in our perceptions of what people have to be, or look like, for particular professions. So...did you picture an astronomer who was a woman? Why, or why not? You'll have the chance to think about the issue of gender in astronomy, and science in general, in this assignment. The introductory college astronomy textbooks that we use provide a brief sense of the history of astronomy, sketching the development of the science from ancient Assyrian and Mesopotamian astronomers through the Greeks, and then concentrating upon the European astronomers of Copernicus, Brahe, Kepler, Galileo, and Newton. Some textbooks include a bit about the contributions of other cultures, including Mayan, Chinese, Polynesian, and Native American astronomers. But if astronomers are mentioned in these historical recaps, they are almost always men. What about the other half of society? What about women? Our textbook and others do include historical and current references to the lives and contributions of some women: Caroline Herschel, Maria Mitchell, Annie Cannon, Henrietta Leavitt, Jocelyn Bell, and a few others. Sometimes pictures and brief sketches are provided, and there are sometimes vague references to "difficulties" women encountered in their attempts to crack the gender barrier within science. But there are far, far more contributors to astronomy who
were and are women than our textbooks share. And those difficulties
were real, were significant, and have not disappeared.
So our goals together in this unit are to learn more about the
historical and current contributions of women to the science
of astronomy, to learn of the excellent and growing electronic
resources related to the status of women in astronomy, and to
discuss as a class in our shared online forum what you think,
and what you have learned through the research you are
about to do. Part 1: Complete the Picture an Astronomer Activity. (You should have already have done this in class.) Part 2: Research and document the contributions of 2 women who have contributed to Astronomy. One of the contributors must come from the historical profiles of women who made contributions in the past, and one from the current profiles of women still working in Astronomy today. Use Contributions of Women to the Science of Astronomy available at: http://www.chabotcollege.edu/faculty/shildreth/astronomy/06contrib.html as one source for your work.
EXTRA CREDIT: You may choose to post your work in the class online site in addition to submitting it in class. You earn +5 points extra credit for doing so, BUT:
ADDITIONAL EXTRA CREDIT: Read the articles at http://www.chabotcollege.edu/faculyt/shildreth/astronomy/06status.html provided from STATUS, a publication from the American Astronomical Society's Committee on the Status of Women in Astronomy (CWSA) and/or other articles I have provided, or a similar article from a websearch of your own choice. Use the Chabot College library and the ability to search our extensive online database. (see http://www.chabotcollege.edu/Library/abby/dblist.html) Turn in (and post in the Blackboard discussion area) your thoughts about biases that existed in the past and still exist today, and how you see those issues evolving in your lifetime. Respond constructively to the postings of at least two of your classmates. - 10 points for your posting and responses to others. For additional extra credit, you might consider the following or, as always, you are encouraged to come up with your own ideas and contact me for concurrence and assistance. The amount of extra credit available will depend upon what you are able to do.. Extra credit is due no later than the last week of class. Idea A: After doing the research above, contact one of the women currently doing astronomy, and politely request the opportunity to do a short email or chat interview. You can find comprehensive listings at the CWSA website, as well as NASA. From the research you have done, develop 3-5 questions to ask, and submit to the discussion forum the results of your interview. You might want to refer your contact to this webpage so that she will get a better idea of what you are doing. Idea B: Write a longer essay (4-5 pages, double-spaced, with an additional page for a bibliography) about the issue of gender in Astronomy (or science in general). Locate at least one, and preferably two or more resources from print or online media, journals, or reports not already linked in the resource section available at http://www.chabotcollege.edu/faculty/shildreth/astronomy/picture/resources.html One great place to start would be some of the articles available in STATUS, or try doing a literature search with the help of our library faculty. As always, your scholarship is measured in part by your research, proper use of references, citations, and the bibliography. Brief new items may not provide sufficient detail or substance to use as your primary sources here. Email me your essay. Idea C: Investigate two or more of the resource sites in the resource section in depth, and evaluate:
Resources for the entire unit on Women in Astronomy are available here in bibliographic form (http://www.chabotcollege.edu/faculty/shildreth/astronomy/picture/resources.html) . |
Content Copyright 2008 Scott Hildreth
Image of "Women
Hold Up Half the Sky" from 4000
Years of Women in
Science Copyright 1997 University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Contact me! Scott Hildreth