4.2 Article

I Need A Break or I Might Quit: STEM Academics' Pandemic Experiences

Journal

COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGIST
Volume 52, Issue 1, Pages 88-123

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00110000231201881

Keywords

COVID-19; STEM; work-family interface; consensual qualitative research-modified; women-identifying faculty

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This research examines the impact of COVID-19 on the work and tenure of 103 women in STEM academia. The findings reveal significant concerns about disruptions in research, increased time demands, negative effects on mental health and burnout, and an escalation of these impacts from 2020 to 2021.
This research highlights the voices of 103 STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) women in academia who responded to a series of open-ended questions regarding the impact of COVID-19 on their work and tenure. The current study also sought to compare these responses to similar questions that were collected a year prior (n = 84) during the earliest months of the pandemic (Dunn et al., 2022). Consensual qualitative research-modified (CQR-M; Spangler et al., 2011) was utilized to analyze the data. The main findings reveal substantial concerns about the pandemic's negative impact on academic work, highlighting research disruptions, difficulty balancing demands on time (e.g., extra responsibilities at work, navigating work and family conflicts), impacts on mental health and burnout for women faculty in STEM, and an increase in negative effects from 2020 to 2021. Clinical implications, future research directions, and social advocacy interventions in the context of COVID-19 will be discussed.

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