| Literature DB >> 35663843 |
Louise Archer1, Angela M Calabrese Barton1, Emily Dawson1, Spela Godec1, Ada Mau1, Uma Patel1.
Abstract
While there are many different frameworks seeking to identify what benefits young people might derive from participation in informal STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) learning (ISL), this paper argues that the sector would benefit from an approach that foregrounds equity and social justice outcomes. We propose a new model for reflecting on equitable youth outcomes from ISL that identifies five key areas: (1) Grounded fun; (2) STEM capital; (3) STEM trajectories; (4) STEM identity work; and (5) Agency+ . The model is applied to empirical data (interviews, observations and youth portfolios) collected over one year in four UK-based ISL settings with 33 young people (aged 11-14), largely from communities that are traditionally under-represented in STEM. Analysis considers the extent to which participating youth experienced equitable outcomes, or not, in relation to the five areas. The paper concludes with a discussion of implications for ISL and how the model might support ongoing efforts to reimagine ISL as vehicle for social justice.Entities:
Keywords: Equity; ISL; Outcomes; Youth
Year: 2022 PMID: 35663843 PMCID: PMC9151509 DOI: 10.1007/s11422-021-10065-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cult Stud Sci Educ ISSN: 1871-1502
Situating the Equitable Youth Outcomes from ISL model
| Common existing ‘traditional’ outcome measure aras | Critical ISL research | Bourdieusian (sociological) lens | Equitable youth outcomes from ISL Model |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fun/enjoyment | What and whose habitus is valued by the field | ‘Grounded’ fun | |
| STEM learning, knowledge & skills | STEM learning and skills, broadened/inclusive STEM knowledge and leveraging of funds of knowledge | STEM capital (knowledge, learning, literacies, use-value and exchange value capital) | STEM capital —STEM learning, literacy, skills, broadened/inclusive STEM knowledges and leveraging of funds of knowledge (use-value capital) |
| STEM interest, attitudes, inspiration | STEM interest and (broader/inclusive) attitudes | STEM habitus/capital | STEM capital—interest and (broader, inclusive) dispositions |
| STEM capital—social capital | STEM capital—social contacts and networks | ||
| STEM identity and identity work | STEM habitus | STEM identity/STEM identity work | |
| STEM aspirations | STEM path-making, path-hacking and progression | Role of structural inequalities and field on habitus and trajectory | STEM trajectories |
| ‘Twenty-first century skills’ | Critical STEM agency, representation, rightful presence | Structured agency | Agency+ (Critical STEM agency, representation) |
Overview of participating organisations, programmes and young people
| Setting | Programme | Young people’s self-identifications | Nature of programme |
|---|---|---|---|
| Digital Arts Centre | Weekly technology-focused sessions and holiday programmes | 6 boys 1 South Asian, 5 white British 3 working class, 3 middle-class | Weekly after-school drop in tech club that also runs during school holidays alongside holiday programmes. Participants code and create digital products (e.g. animations, programme robots) |
| Community Zoo | One-week holiday programme | 4 boys, 5 girls 1 Black Caribbean, 1 Mixed South Asian /white European, 1 Mixed White European/North African, 1 Middle Eastern, 5 white British 4 working class, 5 middle class | One week, all day holiday programme. Participants learn about habitats, ecology, create portfolios, create artefacts for the zoo (e.g. bird boxes, signage, enrichment objects for enclosures) and participate in feeding animals and observing/recording and managing animal data (including some maths and statistics) |
| Girls STEM Club | Weekly school-based STEM club with industry visits (September–January) | 10 girls 5 Black British, 1 Southeast Asian, 3 white British/Irish, 1 Mixed (Black Caribbean/White British) All working class | Weekly after school club with weekly themed sessions that showcase women in STEM (especially BAME) and have a carousel of STEM games and activities e.g. making and flying paper airplanes, modelling the solar system. Also includes a school visit industry day (learning to code an app) and a hackathon weekend (learning to programme in Scratch and Python) |
| Science Centre | Bi-weekly school-based club with visits to the science centre (one academic year) | 4 boys, 5 girls 1 Black Caribbean, 1 Middle Eastern, 2 mixed race, 5 white British 3 working class, 9 middle-class | Young people are 'researchers' who contribute to the development of interactive displays in new exhibitions and are consulted by staff about the centre's programmes. Some sessions are held at school and a couple at the science centre (mixed STEM activities, e.g. making robots; discussion and development of exhibition ideas). Youth and their families are also invited to an open weekend at the science centre and each young person receives free passes for their family and friends to visit outside of the programme |
Operationalising the ISL Youth Equitable Outcomes model in ISL evaluation and practice
| Outcome area | Guiding Questions | Example evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Grounded fun | To what extent are young people’s pleasurable/fun experiences of ISL (1) connected to (grounded in) their identities and what matters to them? (2) challenging dominant normative STEM relationships and representations? | Young people reporting that ISL experiences are interesting and engage with issues that are important to them Fun activities and representations of science/scientists are inclusive and diverse and grounded in marginalized youths’ lives and what matters to them |
| STEM capital | To what extent is the STEM capital of underserved youth being valued, supported and augmented? | Examples of how under-served young people’s community knowledges are valued and drawn on in ISL Programmes engage meaningfully with questioning whose knowledge and expertise is being recognised in and through STEM Evidence of under-served youth gaining meaningful STEM knowledge/skills, STEM social contacts and networks, dispositions and everyday STEM engagement Evidence that the expertise of under-served youth is being leveraged, valued and recognised in and beyond ISL |
| STEM identity/work | In what ways does the ISL experience support young people to: (1) (re)define what and who counts in STEM? (2) recognise the community and STEM expertise of under-served young people? (2) feel valued and recognised by others for their (STEM) expertise? In what ways does the ISL experience support privileged youth to (1) understand and recognise inequalities in STEM and (2) be more reflexive and inclusive | Evidence that young people feel engaged, enabled, and empowered within the ISL programme/activity to have on going dialogues about their identity and what matters to them Evidence that support for young people’s STEM identity work is systemic and embedded in ISL Evidence of programmes valuing young people for who they are, not who they are expected to be |
| STEM trajectories | How are under-served young people’s trajectories and path-making/progression being supported and enhanced within, beyond and through ISL/STEM? | Examples of under-served youth being supported in their trajectories both in and beyond STEM |
| Agency+ | How is the ISL experience (1) supporting young people’s agency, but particularly among underserved youth? (2) actively challenging unjust STEM representations and practices? (3) enabling under-served youth to have a rightful presence and feel that they belong in ISL and STEM? | Examples of young people using their (STEM) expertise to take action on issues that matter to them Examples of young people redefining STEM in more equitable and inclusive ways—and evidence of these redefinitions being recognised and valued by others (particularly educators, adults, peers and dominant others) Evidence that under-served young people feel a sense of belonging and ownership in ISL and STEM and feel that people like them are well represented, valued and present in these spaces Evidence that young people’s wider lives, opportunities and well-being have been positively impacted by an ISL experience |
| Pseudonym | ISL setting | Gender (self-identified) | Ethnicity (self-identified) | Social class (parental occupation/Free School Meals) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lulabelle | Community Zoo | F | White British | Working class |
| Magic | Community Zoo | M | Black Caribbean | Working class |
| Evie | Community Zoo | F | White British | Middle class |
| Charlie | Community Zoo | F | Mixed race | Middle class |
| Rhubarb | Community Zoo | F | White British | Middle class |
| Iron | Community Zoo | M | White British | Working class |
| Ocean | Community Zoo | M | White British | Middle class |
| Star | Community Zoo | M | ||
| Mixed (White European/North African) | Working class | |||
| Tardis | Community Zoo | F | Middle Eastern | Middle class |
| Black-and-White (BnW) | Digital Arts Centre | M | White British | Middle class |
| Rob | Digital Arts Centre | M | White British | Middle class |
| Triangle | Digital Arts Centre | M | White British | Working class |
| Spuggs | Digital Arts Centre | M | White British | Middle class |
| Ginger | Digital Arts Centre | M | White British | Working class |
| Beast | Digital Arts Centre | M | South Asian | Working class |
| Tori | Girls STEM Club | F | Black British | Working class |
| Innocent | Girls STEM Club | F | Black African | Working class |
| Dani | Girls STEM Club | F | Black African | Working class |
| Crystal | Girls STEM Club | F | White British/Irish | Working class |
| Emerald | Girls STEM Club | F | Black African | Working class |
| Dinosaur | Girls STEM Club | F | East Asian | Working class |
| Bubblepop | Girls STEM Club | F | Black African | Working class |
| Avette | Girls STEM Club | F | Mixed (Black Caribbean/White) | Working class |
| Annie | Girls STEM Club | F | White British | Working class |
| Bubblegum | Girls STEM Club | F | White British | Working class |
| Fox | Science Centre | F | White British | Working class |
| 00 7 | Science Centre | M | White British | Middle class |
| Reek | Science Centre | M | White British | Working class |
| Dragon | Science Centre | F | ||
| Mixed (Black Caribbean/White British) | Working class | |||
| Unicorn | Science Centre | F | White British | Working class |
| Lara | Science Centre | F | White European | Working class |
| Wolf | Science Centre | M | Mixed (Middle Eastern White European) | Working class |
| Jack | Science Centre | M | White British | Working class |