| Literature DB >> 28710060 |
Hannah Jordt1, Sarah L Eddy2, Riley Brazil3, Ignatius Lau4, Chelsea Mann5, Sara E Brownell6, Katherine King1, Scott Freeman1.
Abstract
Achievement gaps between underrepresented minority (URM) students and their white peers in college science, technology, engineering, and mathematics classrooms are persistent across many white-majority institutions of higher education. Attempts to reduce this phenomenon of underperformance through increasing classroom structure via active learning have been partially successful. In this study, we address the hypothesis that the achievement gap between white and URM students in an undergraduate biology course has a psychological and emotional component arising from stereotype threat. Specifically, we introduced a values affirmation exercise that counters stereotype threat by reinforcing a student's feelings of integrity and self-worth in three iterations of an intensive active-learning college biology course. On average, this exercise reduced the achievement gap between URM and white students who entered the course with the same incoming grade point average. This result suggests that achievement gaps resulting from the underperformance of URM students could be mitigated by providing students with a learning environment that removes psychological and emotional impediments of performance through short psychosocial interventions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28710060 PMCID: PMC5589421 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.16-12-0351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Sample demographics, including the sample of students across the six sections who took all four exams, completed both dosages of the intervention, and have a measure of prior academic ability or do not have a measure of prior academic ability
| Full sample | Sample with a measure of prior demonstrated college ability | Sample with no measure of prior demonstrated college ability | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2383 | 1959 | 424 | |
| Gender | |||
| Female | 1463 | 1227 | 236 |
| Male | 920 | 732 | 188 |
| Ethnicity/race/nationality | |||
| Asian | 922 | 776 | 146 |
| Black | 53 | 43 | 10 |
| Hawaiian or Pacific Islander | 31 | 29 | 2 |
| Hispanic | 144 | 122 | 22 |
| International | 141 | 88 | 53 |
| White | 985 | 837 | 148 |
| Not reported | 86 | 48 | 38 |
| Median exam points earned | 277 | 278.5 | 270.5 |
| (interquartile range) | (246–304) | (248–305) | (238–299) |
| Treatment group | |||
| Control group | 1174 | 970 | 200 |
| Treatment group | 1170 | 963 | 211 |
Model-selection table for the analyses with cumulative college GPA identifying the preferred modela
| Analyses with cumulative college GPA | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial model and terms dropped | Deviance | Residual | Residual deviance | AIC | |
| 1006 | 915,723.0 | 7104.2 | |||
| − (Section × treatment × URM status) | 5 | 3757.7 | 1011 | 919,480.7 | 7098.4 |
| − (URM status × section) | 5 | 734.9 | 1016 | 920,215.6 | 7089.2 |
| − (Treatment × section) | 5 | 3085.31 | 1021 | 923,300.9 | 7082.7 |
| − (Treatment × URM status × gender) | 1 | 650.79 | 1022 | 923,951.7 | 7081.4 |
| − (URM status × gender) | 1 | 356.0 | 1023 | 924,307.7 | 7079.8 |
| − (URM status × cumulative college GPA × treatment) | 1 | 1136.5 | 1024 | 925,444.2 | 7079.1 |
| − (URM status × cumulative college GPA) | 1 | 668.0 | 1025 | 926,112.2 | 7077.9 |
| − (Treatment × cumulative college GPA) | 1 | 656.6 | 1026 | 926,768.8 | 7076.6 |
aFor each comparison, the term subtracted from the model is listed in the first column. As this is a cumulative table, any terms above the current row were already removed from the model before the current row was tested. Terms were removed if the AIC of the reduced model was 2 or less than the AIC value of the fuller model or if the models had equivalent AIC values (∆AIC < 2). If removing the term increased the AIC by more than 2, the term was retained in the model.
Regression coefficients for preferred models for analysis with cumulative college GPA as a covariate and without cumulative college GPA as a covariatea
| Preferred model for students with cumulative college GPA covariate | Preferred model without cumulative college GPA covariate | |
|---|---|---|
| β ± SE | β ± SE | |
| Coefficients | ( | ( |
| Intercept | 278.3 ± 3.48 | 275.6 ± 3.51 |
| (<0.001) | (<0.001) | |
| Cumulative college GPA at start of course | 52.81 ± 2.42 (<0.001) | NA |
| Racial group | ||
| (ref: white) | ||
| URM | −16.01 ± 3.58 (<0.001) | −25.6 ± 4.07 (<0.001) |
| Gender | ||
| (ref: male) | ||
| Female | −2.52 ± 2.76 (0.363) | −5.4 ± 2.19 (0.0133) |
| Treatment group | ||
| (ref: control) | ||
| Treatment | 6.45 ± 3.29 (0.0501) | 3.7 ± 2.37 (0.123) |
| Gender × treatment group | ||
| (ref: male × control) | ||
| Female × treatment | −8.10 ± 3.90 (0.038) | NA |
| Race × treatment group | ||
| (ref: white × control) | ||
| URM × treatment | 10.29 ± 4.75 (0.031) | 8.2 ± 5.37 (0.126) |
| Section | ||
| (ref: section B) | ||
| Section A | 30.8 ± 3.60 (<0.001) | 37.8 ± 3.98 (<0.001) |
| Section C | −1.7 ± 3.62 (0.639) | 6.3 ± 4.00 (0.116) |
| Section D | −9.4 ± 3.83 (0.014) | −4.5 ± 4.09 (0.273) |
| Section E | −0.1 ± 3.52 (0.989) | 6.9 ± 3.79 (0.071) |
| Section F | −8.5 ± 3.58 (0.017) | −1.8 ± 3.87 (0.633) |
| 0.445 | 0.174 |
aThe outcome variable is exam performance. For categorical variables, the reference level (ref.) is in parentheses, indicating the binary comparison that was made (e.g., section B compared with A and section B compared with section C).
FIGURE 1.Predicted student exam scores for different student groups assuming all students had the average cumulative college GPA and were in the reference section. Based on preferred model including cumulative GPA.
Model-selection table for the analyses without cumulative college GPA identifying the preferred modela
| Initial model and terms dropped | Analyses without cumulative college GPA | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deviance | Residual | Residual deviance | AIC | ||
| 1192 | 1,623,611 | 8832.1 | |||
| − (Section × treatment × URM status) | 5 | 10,616.7 | 1197 | 1,634,228 | 8830.1 |
| − (Treatment × section) | 5 | 1469.8 | 1202 | 1,635,698 | 8821.2 |
| − (URM status × section) | 5 | 5558.5 | 1207 | 1,641,256 | 8815.3 |
| − (Treatment × URM status × gender) | 1 | 751.4 | 1208 | 1,642,008 | 8813.9 |
| − (URM status × gender) | 1 | 1389.2 | 1209 | 1,643,397 | 8813.0 |
| − (Treatment × gender) | 1 | 2386.7 | 1210 | 1,645,784 | 8812.7 |
aFor each comparison, the term subtracted from the model is listed in the first column. As this is a cumulative table, any terms above the current row were already been removed from the model before the current row was tested. Terms were removed if the AIC of the reduced model was 2 or less than the AIC value of the fuller model or if the models had equivalent AIC values (∆AIC < 2). If removing the term increased the AIC by more than 2, the term was retained in the model.