Average rating: | Rated 3.5 of 5. |
Level of importance: | Rated 4 of 5. |
Level of validity: | Rated 3 of 5. |
Level of completeness: | Rated 4 of 5. |
Level of comprehensibility: | Rated 3 of 5. |
Competing interests: | None |
This is an interesting article looking at gender differences in questions asked at job talks. I think the article could be improved in several ways. Firstly, more time could be devoted to in the Introduction/Background section to talking about the context -- a more indepth discussion of previous work, and perhaps more on the sociological/cultural mechnisms underlying various hypotheses about why different types of questions would create environments or situations of gender inequality. At the moment the conclusion is that the effects weren't significant --- and maybe that doesn't matter to gender inequality --- but it would be nice to see more of this discussion up front.
Other points/questions:
- a few things need to be better clarified. For example, the terms rating/rater, 'events' are used early on but not very well defined
- The test statistic is chosen based on the median number of questions. I was wondering if any analysis was done based on the tone/types of questions asked
- in the regression, did you consider for controlling for other covariates? for example, number of publications, whether or not the speaker was trained in the same discipline as the department?