Assessing Graduate Programs
Is Your Graduate Department in Physics Female Friendly?
The APS Committee on the Status of Women in Physics (CSWP) has facilitated the collection of responses to a series of questions about graduate programs in physics that should be helpful to those interested in assessing the climate for women at various graduate schools. Department chairs (or their assignees) were asked the five questions below. All the responses are self-reported by department chairs (or their assignees), and the APS and CSWP assume no responsibility for the accuracy of the information submitted.
The responses, for each institution, can be obtained by clicking on the name of the institution below. The questions are:- How many tenure-track or tenured faculty -- male/female?
- How many graduate students ? -- male/female?
- How many post doctoral associates? -- male/female?
- Is there a family leave policy for graduate students? If so, describe.
- Is there family health insurance available for graduate students? Is it included in the stipend?
- In a paragraph, please describe why someone applying to graduate school who is interested in a female-friendly department should choose your institution.
- Has the institution had a Climate for Women in Physics Site Visit or Gender Equity Conversation?
If you are a department chair, and would like to add (or change) your institution's contribution, please email Deanna Ratnikova for the web site address where data can be entered.
Institution Responses
142 total surveys as of today
• Air Force Institute of Technology (Engineering Physics)
• Bowling Green State University (Physics & Astronomy)
• Brown University (Department of Physics)
• California State University Fullerton
• California State University Long Beach
• California State University, Fresno
• Columbia University (Astronomy and Astrophysics)
• Dartmouth College (Physics & Astronomy)
• Florida Institute of Technology (Physics & Space Sciences)
• George Washington University
• Georgia State University (Physics and Astronomy)
• Harvard University School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) (Applied Physics)
• Howard University (Physics and Astronomy)
• Illinois Institute of Technology
• MIT
• Michigan Technological University
• Minnesota State University, Mankato
• Mississippi State University (Physics and Astronomy)
• New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology
• North Carolina State University
• Northern Illinois University
• Ohio State University (Astronomy)
• Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
• San Francisco State Univ (Physics and Astronomy)
• Southern Methodist University
• Stephen F. Austin State University
• Stony Brook (Physics and Astronomy)
• Texas A&M University-Commerce
• The Catholic University of America
• The City College of the City University of New York
• The University of Texas at Austin (Physics)
• The University of Tulsa (Physics & Engineering Physics)
• University of Alabama at Birmingham
• University of Arizona (Astronomy)
• University of California Los Angeles (Dept. Physics and Astronomy)
• University of California, Berkeley
• University of California, Davis
• University of California, Irvine (Physics and Astronomy)
• University of California, Los Angeles
• University of California, Riverside (Department of Physics and Astronomy)
• University of California, San Diego
• University of California, Santa Barbara
• University of California, Santa Cruz
• University of California, Santa Cruz (Astronomy/Astrophysics)
• University of Colorado (Astrophysical & Planetary Sciences)
• University of Colorado, Boulder
• University of Dayton (Physics/Electro-Optics)
• University of Denver (Physics and Astronomy)
• University of Houston Clear Lake
• University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
• University of Iowa (Physics and Astronomy)
• University of Kansas (Physics and Astronomy)
• University of Kentucky (Physics and Astronomy)
• University of Louisiana at Lafayette
• University of Louisville (Physics and Astronomy)
• University of Maryland (Astronomy)
• University of Massachusetts, Amherst (Astronomy)
• University of Minnesota Duluth
• University of Minnesota Twin Cities
• University of Missouri-St. Louis (Physics and Astronomy)
• University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
• University of Oregon (Physics)
• University of South Carolina
• University of Texas at Arlington
• University of Toledo (Physics & Astronomy)
• University of Utah (Department of Physics & Astronomy)
• University of Washington (Astronomy) (Astronomy)
• University of Wisconsin, Madison
• Washington University (Physics & Astronomy)
• Worcester Polytechnic Institute







