Archive Projects

Living and Working in Lockdown: ​what’s gender got to do with it?

The role of gender in the experience of lockdown for university staff working from home

The Project

Principal Investigator: Dr Kate Carruthers Thomas
Project Duration: June – December 2020

This research addressed two over-arching questions:

  1. What role does gender play in the experience of lockdown for university staff working from home and how does gender interact with ethnic group, age and role type?
  2. What key issues and implications do the findings raise for gender equality – for individuals and for the university?

Data was collected via an online survey (Qualtrics Survey Software), open to all academic and professional services staff at one large modern UK university.  The survey went live on 10 June and closed on 10 July.  543 completed responses were received.

Key Findings

Overall, the findings reflect an asymmetric impact of lockdown, well-documented in national literature. The data indicate a disproportionately negative impact of working from home during lockdown on all BCU female staff, with a particular burden on female academic staff. Female staff were:

  • more likely to take primary or sole responsibility for homeschooling
  • less likely to have access to dedicated working space at home
  • more likely to experience challenges in working comfortably and having appropriate technical equipment
  • more likely to report problems experienced from noise levels/interruptions while working from home
  • more likely to find balancing homeschooling, household and work-related tasks very difficult or impossible
  • more likely to report challenges in managing work/life/home boundaries
  • more likely to report a positive impact of lockdown on receiving appropriate support from their line manager.

In addition, female academic staff were

  • more likely to report a negative impact on their capacity to conduct research and write for publication. This is particularly acute for female academics with children.
Living and Working in Lockdown

Read the full report here