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Do women have the brains to be great scientists?

Hopkins, an MIT professor, walked out when the president of Harvard implied that women scientists were innately less talented than male ones. Now, the Nobel Prizes give her the last laugh.

It’s been a spectacular week for women in science, and a bad week for “the Larry Summers hypothesis." In 2005, while president of Harvard, he suggested that women are inherently worse than men at math, science and engineering, particularly at the highest levels. This week three women won Nobel prizes in science: two in medicine and one in chemistry. That achievement should put the nail in the coffin of the question Summers raised: Can many women really be great scientists?

When I was a graduate student in biology at Harvard 40 years ago, my colleagues used to sit around discussing whether girls were capable of being great scientists.  Could a woman really win a Nobel Prize in molecular biology? Men I knew wondered if women’s brains were so different from men's that they couldn’t make the creative breakthroughs that lead to the greatest discoveries. That’s what I wondered too. Sure, there was Madame Curie--but there were too few Madame Curies to convince us she was anything but an exception.

It turns out that back then, in the dark ages for women in science, we were asking the wrong question. Instead of asking if women's brains were inferior, we should have asked why there were so few women at the major research universities and laboratories that breed future Nobel laureates.

In the late 1960s there were essentially no women on the science faculties of places like Harvard, Cal Tech and MIT (where I now work as a professor of molecular biology). Things began to change dramatically in the early 1970s, thanks to affirmative action measures taken under Richard Nixon. Those included the “Shultz regs” (George Shultz was Nixon's Secretary of Labor), which required universities to hire women onto their faculties or risk losing their federal funding. The Nobel prizes in medicine this week are the end result of those laws.  Nobelist Elizabeth Blackburn joined the Berkeley faculty in 1978 and Nobelist Carol Greider was her star graduate student. (The third new laureate is Ada Yonath, an Israeli.)

Until about 10 years ago, women still comprised only five percent of the science faculty at Harvard and eight percent at MIT, with similar numbers at other high-powered research universities. (Today 17 percent of the MIT science faculty are women, as a result of specific efforts by the MIT administration in collaboration with senior women faculty.)  But even those paltry numbers from 10 years ago have been enough to start yielding female Nobelists. In fact, if we assume that female faculty win these prizes at the same rate as male faculty, then only in the past couple of years have there been enough women employed at MIT to begin producing Nobel laureates.
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11.01.2009
Carol
Women have the "brains" to be anything they aspire to be! It's misogynistic to believe anything else. In the past, girls were encouraged to catch a good husband, settle down and have kids. We need to assist our girls to reach their potentials. After all, who is going to bail out this world after the men have totally mucked it up? :->
10.28.2009
Linda C Smith
My observations of life tell me that more women will be seen in the halls of science as more girls decide to go that route. Build the dream in the girl, let it bud in her teens and then watch it bloom as she decides when grown that math, science, exploration, experimentation and innovation are something she wants to do. More women will grace these endeavors as more women decide that is what they want to do. Has nothing whatever to do with "brain structure" or chromosomes. Has to do with women recognizing that doors are open.
10.26.2009
LadyC
Great article! Larry Summers is a putz, I read his lecture for myself a couple years ago and was offended. I hope we will get more women in the sciences in future generations. Congrats to the Nobel winners and I hope they will all mentor young women. I work in a male dominated industry too and it's tough sometimes.
10.20.2009
Kim Wallen
I am quite surprised that an accomplished scientist like Nancy Hopkins is would resort to tactics usually seen on Fox News to smear Larry Summers. There are many reasons to have a negative reaction to Larry Summers Harvard speech (the one that Dr. Hopkins walked out on). Unfortunaly, almost none of the legitimate crticisms of his speech are included in Hopkins sad piece. For example Hopkins writes: "That achievement should put the nail in the coffin of the question Summers raised: Can many women really be great scientists? " Whether three nobel prizes for women can put any idea in the coffin the fact is that Larry Summers never raised the question that Hopkins supposedly quotes from his speech. I am unfamiliar with anyone seriously rasing that question, certainly not Summers in his speech. I suppose it is possible that since Hopkins didn't actually hear the speech she simply decided to make up what he said to suit her purpose. Not very admirable behavior for an acadmic star
10.13.2009
Ruggy
A transcript is available of Larry Summers' conference remarks on 1/14/2005. This was not available when the boston.com article (referenced above) was published just three days after the event. The reader may find it a rewarding endeavor to form an independent opinion of Mr. Summers' remarks, rather than an opinion rendered by someone who attended but "walked out", or an opinion from a boston.com writer who had never had access to the remarks in question. Larry Summers' remarks are available for anyone to see here: (cut and paste, then remove the embedded space from the following URL) http://www.president.harvard.edu/ speeches/summers_2005/nber.php
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