Women are absent from the top ranks at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, a stark contrast to the increase in gender parity at other schools.
SIUC’s chancellor, vice chancellors, provost and all 10 academic deans are men. Nationally, women made up at least a third of the vice presidents and provosts surveyed and 36 percent of deans, according to a report published in February by the American Council on Education and the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources (CUPA-HR).
SIUC Interim Provost Don Rice says that the lack of women administrators at the 21,000-student campus has been a “historical problem.”
“The search committees haven’t been as active as they should be,” Rice says. “We’ve had a sense that what a search committee does is that you write your ad and put it in the newspaper … but you don’t really get out and recruit in the applicant pool.”
Rice says that since last fall, he has been personally meeting with every search committee formed for an open job and directing them to widen the applicant pool. The result: Women make up half of short-listed candidates for the positions of dean of mass communications and a newly created job of director of the revamped honors program.
Rice says he had been shocked in the previous year when the short list of candidates for the dean of education did not include any women. Nationally, education departments are dominated by women.
“If you can’t find a female administrator in education, you can’t find a female administrator anywhere,” Rice says. “I expected better