Women—particularly underrepresented minority women—and early-career academics feel like impostors in fields that value brilliance.
- 1 July 2022
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Journal of Educational Psychology
- Vol. 114 (5), 1086-1100
- https://doi.org/10.1037/edu0000669
Abstract
Educational Impact and Implications Statement Feeling like an impostor is common among academics, but the burden of feeling like an impostor is not distributed evenly: Women and early-career scholars are particularly likely to feel like frauds in their professional lives. Using the largest sample of academics that has been brought to bear on this phenomenon to date (with over 4,000 academics representing more than 80 fields), the present research uncovers a feature of academic settings that relates systematically to the magnitude of these differences: We found that the more a field was perceived to require "raw talent" for success, the more women (especially women from racial/ethnic groups that are traditionally underrepresented in academia) and early-career academics felt like impostors. These findings highlight the substantial extent to which impostor experiences are a function of the contexts that people must navigate rather than a symptom of inherent psychological vulnerabilities. Feeling like an impostor is common among successful individuals, but particularly among women and early-career professionals. Here, we investigated how gender and career-stage differences in impostor feelings vary as a function of the contexts that academics have to navigate. In particular, we focused on a powerful but underexplored contextual feature: the extent to which raw intellectual talent (i.e., "brilliance") is prized in an academic field. We hypothesized that gender and career-stage differences in impostor feelings would be magnified in fields that value brilliance. We tested this hypothesis using the largest sample of academics that has been brought to bear on the impostor phenomenon to date, with over 4,000 academics recruited from nine research-intensive U.S. universities and representing more than 80 fields across the natural and social sciences, the humanities, and medicine. Consistent with our hypothesis, the more that success in a field was perceived to require brilliance, the more that women-especially women from racial/ethnic groups that are traditionally underrepresented in academia-and early-career academics felt like impostors. Impostor feelings were also related to a lower sense of belonging in a field and lower self-efficacy, highlighting the potential negative implications of the impostor phenomenon for academics' long-term success and for the diversity of fields that value brilliance.Keywords
Funding Information
- National Science Foundation (BCS-1530669; BCS-1733897)
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