| Literature DB >> 33938764 |
Tissyana C Camacho1, Yolanda Vasquez-Salgado2, Gabriela Chavira2, David Boyns3, Scott Appelrouth3, Carrie Saetermoe2, Crist Khachikian4.
Abstract
Underrepresented racial minority (URM) students in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics majors encounter educational, social, and structural challenges on the path toward their degrees and careers. An undergraduate research program grounded in critical race theory was developed and implemented to address this disparity. NIH BUILD PODER focuses on developing science identities in URM students through a culturally relevant and responsive research training environment, ultimately increasing their pursuit of biomedical-related research careers. The current study examines differences in science identities and the intention to pursue a science career among a sample of undergraduate Latinx seniors (N = 102) in biomedical science majors. Three groups were examined: 1) BUILD PODER students, 2) non-BUILD PODER students who reported having a faculty mentor, and 3) non-BUILD PODER students who reported no faculty mentorship. Results revealed that BUILD PODER students reported the highest levels of science personal-identity and science social-identity upon graduation. Additionally, BUILD PODER students and non-BUILD PODER students with a mentor reported greater levels of science social-identity than those without a mentor. BUILD PODER students also reported the strongest intentions to pursue a science career after college. These results highlight the importance of identity processes in the success of Latinx college students in biomedical science majors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33938764 PMCID: PMC8734380 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.19-06-0124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
CRT tenets and related student and faculty sample activities
| CRT tenet | Student activity | Faculty activity |
|---|---|---|
| Centrality of race and racism | Research ethics training: a focus on historical ethical violations on communities of color and other marginalized communities, beginning with a discussion on eugenics | Entry mentor training: 16 hours of “CRT Light” with introduction to unconscious bias and privilege, microaggressions and affirmations, stereotype threat, self-reflection |
| Challenge to dominant ideologies | Summer Jump Start (SJS) program provides education, activities, and specific methods of countering racism in academe, challenging beliefs about intelligence and who is a “scientist” | Critical White awareness group reading White history and consciousness-raising and critical authors of color (Michelle Alexander, Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Ibram X. Kendi, Ta-Nehisi Coates) |
| Interdisciplinary | Shared student lab space: a counter space for students across fields to work collaboratively on projects; faculty and students work on research projects across different fields and disciplines | Mentor training, research speakers and workshops, reading and writing groups have generated many interdisciplinary research collaborations across departments and colleges |
| Experiential knowledge | SJS heritage report: students understand their cultural inheritance and the importance of using their knowledge in the sciences by interviewing elders in their family who are keepers of knowledge | Mentor training year 4: Theatre of the Oppressed (Boal) with Master of Social Work students’ experiences, problematizing and role-playing around discrimination in the sciences |
| Commitment to social justice | Senior project: community partnership with middle school classes around developing interests in science research | Health Equity Research and Education Center for community–academic partnerships around health disparities in our local valley |
Demographics by student group
| BP | NonBP+M | NonBP–M | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 42 | 21 | 39 |
| M age (SD) | 24.21 (3.03) | 23.00 (0.78) | 22.85 (0.63) |
| % Pell Grant recipients | 76% | 81% | 80% |
| % first-generation students | 81% | 95% | 80% |
| % Female | 79% | 81% | 74% |
FIGURE 1.Mean scores on science personal-identity and science social-identity by group. **p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001.
FIGURE 2.Mean scores on science career intention by group. ***p < 0.001.