Annual Faculty Data Report Shows Continued Increase in Female Faculty while the Proportion of Underrepresented Minorities Remains Static
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Annual Faculty Data Report Shows Continued Increase in Female Faculty while the Proportion of Underrepresented Minorities Remains Static
Female faculty comprise 60.8% of total faculty at the U.S. schools and colleges of optometry in 2022-23, according to ASCO’s 2022-2023 Annual Faculty Data Report rising from 60.4% last year and 50.4% in 2012-13. In the past year, the percentage of full-time Black or African American faculty increased from 3.8% to 3.9%; ten years ago it was 3.2%. The percentage of full-time Hispanic or Latino faculty decreased from 5.8% to 5.0%. Ten years ago the percentage was 5.3%.
In addition, over the past year:
- The total number of full-time faculty increased 0.9%, from 793 to 800 (23 schools). Ten years ago there were 682 full-time faculty (21 schools).
- Residency programs continue to be the primary source of new faculty, providing approximately 1/3 of new full-time faculty in the past year. Another ¼ came from optometry practices and 6.2% came from graduate school or other post-doctoral training.
- The percentage of full-time faculty with PhD and other non-OD doctoral degrees decreased from 27.2% to 22.9% in the past year. Ten years ago it was 30.5%.
The report also shows:
- 30.1% of full-time faculty have tenure and 15.9% are on a tenure track at the 19 institutions offering tenure.
- The average age of didactic full-time professors is 58.4 years and for clinical full-time professors 54.0 years.
- The average full-time didactic professor has been with the school for 20.5 years and the average full-time clinical professor for 21.7 years.
For more information, contact Joanne Zuckerman, ASCO’s Manager, Data Services and Special Projects, at jzuckerman@opted.org.