| Literature DB >> 30631700 |
Katherine Rainey1, Melissa Dancy1, Roslyn Mickelson2, Elizabeth Stearns2, Stephanie Moller2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Women and students of color are widely underrepresented in most STEM fields. In order to investigate this underrepresentation, we interviewed 201 college seniors, primarily women and people of color, who either majored in STEM or started but dropped a STEM major. Here we discuss one section of the longer interview that focused on students' sense of belonging, which has been found to be related to retention. In our analysis, we examine the intersections of race and gender with students' sense of belonging, a topic largely absent from the current literature.Entities:
Keywords: Belonging; Gender; Intersectional; Race; Representation; Retention
Year: 2018 PMID: 30631700 PMCID: PMC6310405 DOI: 10.1186/s40594-018-0115-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J STEM Educ ISSN: 2196-7822
Fig. 1Demographics of interview students
Fig. 2Belonging in STEM by gender and major status
Fig. 3Belonging in STEM by race and major status
Fig. 4Majors’ belonging in STEM by gender and race
Fig. 5Belonging in STEM field by race and gender status
Summary of coding scheme used for belonging explanations. Each code is defined for students who had or lacked the reason described
| Code | Reason for belonging | Reason for not belonging |
|---|---|---|
| Interpersonal relationships | Feels socially connected with peers and/or faculty members. May share common interests with peers. | Lacks a social connection with peers. Feels socially different, does not fit in. |
| Science identity | Science is a part of their identity as a person. | Lacks a personal connection to the major or material. |
| Personal interest | Expresses personal interest in course subject or major. | Explicit lack of interest. May find the material boring or unrelated to their reason for choosing their major. |
| Competence | Feels like they understand major-related material or receives good grades in major-related courses. | Feels like they do not understand major-related material well or receives poor grades in major-related courses. |
Fig. 6Reasons majors cite for belonging in STEM by race and gender
Fig. 7Reasons majors and leavers cite for not belonging in STEM by race and gender