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Athena survey of science engineering and Technology (ASSET)
Creator
Connolly, S, University of East Anglia
Study number / PID
852285 (UKDA)
10.5255/UKDA-SN-852285 (DOI)
Data access
Restricted
Series
Not available
Abstract
The surveys contain quantitative data on position, seniority, subject area, contract type, salary, career history and some demographics (age, gender, family status). In addition there were a range of open-ended questions relating to experiences of employment, expectations for careers and views on what leads to success. A significant part of the project was to undertake a coding exercise of all of the open-ended questions in the survey.
There are two SPSS data files – 4,282 in Higher Education and 2,444 in Research Institutes – covering 70/75 questions in HE and RI respectively from the survey. There are a further 300 variables, mostly indicator variables, which were derived in the quantitative and qualitative analysis.
This project investigates the career patterns of research scientists in the UK using data collected by the Athena Survey of Science Engineering and Technology. It aims to identify the factors associated with a successful career, and to examine why the experiences of men and women in the profession differ so significantly. Specifically, women take home only 80% of the earnings of their male counterparts and, though they account for a third of the country’s research scientists, compose only 2% of the highest grades. It compares the experience of researchers employed by three different types of organisation, universities, research institutes and industry, and will assess the impact of each on career opportunity, progression and pay.
The analysis of the factors determining pay and promotion will control for age, seniority, subject area and employer. It will utilise the descriptions that people give of their usual tasks and responsibilities, details of involvement in research projects, editing journals as indicators of productivity and prestige. This regression analysis will be supplemented by a qualitative analysis of what scientists report about their employment conditions and work environment, and how this has affected their career.
We find evidence...
Terminology used is generally based on DDI controlled vocabularies: Time Method, Analysis Unit, Sampling Procedure and Mode of Collection, available at CESSDA Vocabulary Service.
Methodology
Data collection period
01/04/2006 - 29/02/2008
Country
United Kingdom
Time dimension
Not available
Analysis unit
Individual
Universe
Not available
Sampling procedure
Not available
Kind of data
Numeric
Text
Data collection mode
Online survey using the Bristol Online Survey tool.The surveys contain quantitative data on position, seniority, subject area, contract type, salary, career history and some demographics (age, gender, family status). In addition there were a range of open-ended questions relating to experiences of employment, expectations for careers and views on what leads to success. A significant part of the project was to undertake a coding exercise of all of the open-ended questions in the survey.