HRM 320 Week 4 Discussion | Assignment Help | Devry University
- Devry University / HRM 320
- 12 Jan 2019
- Price: $8
- Other / Other
HRM 320 Week 4 Discussion | Assignment Help | Devry University
Week 4
Discussion 1
Week 4: The
Pregnant Professor
Abagail Adams was hired as an
associate professor of economics at Heartland University. She was the first
woman professor hired in the department. When she was hired, she was given the
same three-year time period as all other associate professors at Heartland U.
to establish herself as an academic through teaching ability, publishing
multiple articles in peer-reviewed journals, and developing a rapport with
colleagues in the department through committee participation and attendance at
professional conferences. After three years, as was the custom, she would face
a tenure vote, and would either receive tenure and be promoted to full
professor, or be denied tenure and given one year to locate another position.
During the next three years,
Professor Adams earned high marks in student reviews for her teaching ability
and she published two peer-reviewed scholarly articles on economics. Her male
peers in the Economics Department were enthusiastic regarding her teaching
reviews, though less so about her publishing, since they all published multiple
articles per year and expected her to do the same. In the second year of her
appointment, Professor Adams became pregnant and reduced some of her
non-classroom professional commitments as her pregnancy advanced. She then took
a 3-month leave after the birth of her child, time that was not included in the
three-year review period. Upon returning to work, Professor Adams resumed her
previous level of professional activity.
Throughout the three-year probation
period, the Chair of the Economics Department, Professor Cratchett, as well as
the majority of the other professors in the department complained about
Professor Adams' unwillingness to participate in their weekly discussion forum
on economics and her "lack of commitment" to professional activities,
including her failure to participate in several economics conferences held at
various places around the world. Professor Adams complained that Professor
Cratchett was unfriendly to her and preferred the company of the other men in
the department. She also complained that many of these conferences occurred
while she was pregnant (and could not fly) or while she was on maternity leave.
She also claimed that her salary as Associate Professor was not commensurate
with that of her male colleagues, and that this resulted from the subjective
determination of compensation and promotion in her department, a process
controlled by her male colleagues.
After her three-year probation, her
colleagues in the Economics Department unanimously voted to deny her tenure.
They advertised her position as open to new candidates and within a year had
hired another woman, Professor Betsy Ross, to replace her.
Does Professor Adams have a claim
for discrimination?