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Asian Higher Education Leaders Offer Advice to Break the Bamboo Ceiling

by Samantha Cleaver , May 5, 2008

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When Dr. Ratna Naik was offered the job of dean of physics at Wayne State University, she was reluctant to accept. Coming from a culture that valued silence and the voices of men over women, Naik was afraid of speaking to large groups and wondered if anyone in a department with two women among 30 faculty members would listen to her anyway. After a year, she took the position.

“We have to learn the ways of American culture; it’s OK to speak up in a gentle way,” she said last week at a panel discussion about boosting the number of Asians in administrative ranks, “Breaking Through the Bamboo Ceiling: Asian Americans in Higher Education,” held at WSU.

The bamboo ceiling is a real concern that “does exist for Asian Americans,” said Dr. Yuan Zheng, professor and former chairman of the department of electrical and chemical engineering at The Ohio State University, but in the 30 years that he’s been in the United States, that ceiling “is getting thinner.” For all the Asian American graduate students, there are comparatively few faculty, department chairs or administrators. Part of the reason: Asian Americans are often focused on research, and staying at the top of their fields, rather than advancing into administration.

Still, Dr. Subrata Sengupta, the dean of the College of Engineering and Computer Science at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, has seen the number of Asian American deans increase in the 18 years since he became a dean. He has also seen Asian Americans fill the ranks of some disciplines, like engineering, faster than others.

“Some fields will break the bamboo ceiling earlier than others,” said Sengupta. “But there is a danger of perception being the root of stereotypes,” like the idea that Asians are good at math and science, but not administration or politics.

Now, the key to advancing is to engage with American culture. “As Asian immigrants,” said Zheng, “we must integrate ourselves into the American culture of higher education to break the [bamboo] ceiling.”

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Comments posted here may be reprinted in Diverse: Issues In Higher Education magazine, and may be edited for purposes of clarity and/or space.



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