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Angela M' ByarsWinston

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Discuss conceptual issues in the study of cultural diversity factors in STEM retention. Present data from two studies examining the ... Miner's Canary ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Angela M' ByarsWinston


1
Examining Diversity Within Diversity Retention
of Underrepresented Students in STEM Fields
Presentation to Women in Science Engineering
Leadership Institute February 23, 2006
  • Angela M. Byars-Winston
  • Department of Counseling Psychology

2
Overview of Presentation
  • Introduction
  • Discuss conceptual issues in the study of
    cultural diversity factors in STEM retention
  • Present data from two studies examining the
    relevance of psychocultural variables to academic
    and career choice variables for ethnically
    diverse and women STEM students

3
Three Trends in Research on Underrepresentation
in STEM
  • Predominance of group-comparative studies
  • Tendency to quantify outcomes (e.g., retention)
    in terms of race and gender
  • Study career development of underrepresented
    groups apart from race and gender (i.e., outside
    of context of what it means to be ALANA, female
    or male)

4
Shifting the Center Alternate Lens
  • Shift from
  • How do the STEM interests of ALANA individuals
    differ from those of White individuals?
  • To
  • What factors influence the origins and
    expression of ALANA groups STEM interests?

5
Why study race and gender in STEM retention?
  • These factors are consistently 2 of the strongest
    predictors of STEM status
  • Importance of linking solid institutional
    research to workforce development

6
What enhances STEM achievement and persistence?
  • academic and social integration
  • knowledge and skill development
  • support and motivation
  • monitoring and advisement
  • (cf. Hrabowski Maton, 1995, 2004)

7
What are the challenges to STEM retention?
  • Feelings of alienation
  • Stereotypes about R/EMs career interests
  • Stereotype vulnerability
  • Compromised self-perceptions
  • Low self-confidence (self-efficacy)

8
What accounts for racial and gender inequalities
in STEM outcomes?
  • Relationship between racial (and gender) group
    membership and career processes
  • (Fouad Byars-Winston, 2004 2005).
  • What is truly racial or gendered about career
    development of underrepresented racial groups is
    unknown.

9
STEM degree attainment by gender vs race x
gender Implications
  • Women earned bachelors degrees the number
    earned by men in biological, social, and
    agricultural sciences (men gt in engineering,
    compu sci physical sci)
  • ALANA women earned more degrees than male
    counterparts in physical sciences and science
    technologies (ALANA men gt in engineering or compu
    sci)

10
Need Detailed Consideration of ALANA Students
STEM Experience
  • Sloan Project (2005 2008) awarded to
    investigate the following research question
  • What factors influnece STEM retention for ALANA
    students and how does this vary by
    race/ethnicity, gender, and STEM majors?

11
Study 1 Initial Data From Sloan Project
  • Purpose To better understand paths through which
    race and gender are associated with STEM-related
    academic and career variables
  • SCCT (Lent, Brown, Hackett, 1994 2000)
    academic and career interests, goals, and choices
    develop in part from self-efficacy beliefs and
    outcome expectations.
  • Self-efficacy (and interests) predict m/s college
    major, course enrollment intentions, choice
    goals, career consideration, and academic
    performance (Fouad Smith, 1996 Lent et al.,
    2005 Gainor Lent, 1998 Post, Stewart, and
    Smith, 1991).

12
Cultural and Contextual Factors in SCCT
  • Personal variables like racial development may
    impact career behavior or ALANA groups (Byars
    Hackett, 1998 Hackett Byars, 1996 Lent et
    al., 1994).
  • Perceived academic and career barriers (i.e.,
    proximal contextual variables) and perceived
    ability to cope with these barriers also critical
    factors in future intentions and choice behaviors
    for ALANA groups (Fouad Byars-Winston, 2005).

13
Contextual Influences (Environmental Supports
Barriers)
Self-efficacy Expectations
  • Person Inputs
  • Predispositions
  • -Gender
  • -Race/ethnicity
  • -Disability/
  • Health status

Sources of Self-Efficacy -Mastery
experiences -Vicarious experiences -Social
persuasion -Physiological emotional states
Interests
Goals
Actions
Outcome Expectations
Background Contextual Affordances
FIGURE 1 A Simplified Look at the Key Constructs
and Processes in Social Cognitive Career Theory
Note. Adapted from Toward a Unifying Social
Cognitive Theory of Career and Academic Interest,
Choice, and Performance by Lent, Brown, and
Hackett, 1994 by Lent, Brown, and Hackett.
14
Method
  • Participants preliminary sample (N 56)
  • 32 males, 22 females
  • 18 - 24 yrs (M 20.29, SD 1.80)
  • 18 Southeast Asian (1 Pacific Islander)
  • 14 Black or African American
  • 9 Latino/as 11 Bicultural 3 Native
    American
  • 32 1st/2nd year 17 3rd/4th year 6 5th/6th
    year

15
Measures
16
Significant Correlations Among Measures
  • Perceptions of climate positively correlated with
    STEM interest
  • Gender Self-Acceptance positively correlated with
    course confidence (Academic Self-Efficacy)
  • Ethnic Identity positively correlated with Gender
    Self-Acceptance

17
Implications
  • Relation b/t gender self-acceptance and academic
    self-efficacy may indicate one variable that
    accounts for varied impact of classroom climate
    dynamics
  • Racial and gender variables may operate as
    cognitive appraisals of racialized and gendered
    experiences that influence how ALANA STEM
    students approach their academic and career
    pursuits
  • Future analyses include examination of
    interactions among gender self-acceptance and
    ethnic identity (race x gender x college)

18
Study 2
  • Purpose To empirically investigate why more
    women are likely to study the biological sciences
    than the physical sciences (National Science
    Foundation, 2002).
  • Research question what influence does gender
    identity have on the academic and career choices
    of women in the SME fields?

19
Method
  • Participants
  • Sample of 107 WISE undergraduates with declared
    STEM majors
  • Ethnic composition of sample
  • White American (n 91) Latina (n 4),
    Black/African American (n 3), Asian Pacific
    Islander (n 1), biracial (n 1)
  • Most in 1st (n 40) or 2nd year of college (n
    17) remaining in 3rd, 4th, or 5th year (n 25)

20
Measures
  • Math/Science Self-Efficacy
  • Math/Science Outcome Expecations
  • Gender Self-Definition
  • Gender Self-Acceptance
  • Parental Influence
  • Two Dependent variables
  • Choice of college major and career choice coded
    for gender traditionality

21
Results
  • Gender Self-Definition negatively associated with
    math/science self-efficacy beliefs
  • Gender Self-Definition positively associated with
    choice of a gender neutral or traditionally
    female college major.

22
Implications
  • The social and environmental issues for some
    women in point to STEM pursuits as gendered forms
    of experience in which they must negotiate both
    personal notions of being female and others
    reaction to their being female.
  • Variables capturing experiences of gender are
    important to understanding womens STEM choice
    behavior.

23
Practice Implications
  • Discuss origins and functions of worldviews that
    shape clients academic and career-related
    cognitions
  • Find culturally relevant ways to build
    confidence/self-efficacy
  • Identify coping strategies/skills for managing
    social environments in and outside of classroom

24
Summary
  • Challenges to operationalizing cultural
    components of career choice and development (what
    variables carry effect of cultural group
    membership to STEM academic and career-related
    processes?)
  • Within-group studies that incorporate variables
    related to cultural referent group orientation
    and opportunity structure may advance the field

25
Miners Canary
  • Research into the STEM practices and cultures of
    educational institutions can benefit all groups,
    not just those groups under-represented in STEM
    fields.
  • Research needed in the areas of
  • Culture of science
  • Individual choices
  • Career patterns disaggregated data

26
Sloan Project for STEM Retention
  • Longitudinal analysis to investigate the
    stability of influences from psychoracial
    variables on academic and career variables
    involved in retention.
  • Specifically, for whom are these variables
    salient, how do they contribute to retention, and
    at what point in their STEM academic and career
    development?

27
Thank you!
  • Email abyars_at_education.wisc.edu
  • Project website www.cew.wisc.edu/sloan
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