1 / 14

Increasing Diversity in STEM through Professional Development Activities

Increasing Diversity in STEM through Professional Development Activities. Jonathan M. Holland, Debra A. Major, Valerie J. Morganson, & Karin A. Orvis Old Dominion University. This research was supported by a SEED grant from Old Dominion University. Retention in STEM.

bethan
Download Presentation

Increasing Diversity in STEM through Professional Development Activities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Increasing Diversity in STEM through Professional Development Activities Jonathan M. Holland, Debra A. Major, Valerie J. Morganson, & Karin A. Orvis Old Dominion University This research was supported by a SEED grant from Old Dominion University.

  2. Retention in STEM • Difficult to retain women and minorities in STEM • Fewer of these underrepresented groups enter and persist (Varma, 2007) • Why? Differential preparation outside of classroom? • STEM fields have a “chilly” climate(Morganson et al., in press)

  3. Capitalization Capitalization = Proactive participation in voluntary professional development activities • Builds professional identity in the workplace(Ibarra, 1999) • Influenced by environmental supports and barriers (Maurer et al., 2003) • Differences in these factors between men and women (Lent et al., 2008) • Capitalization has been relatively unexplored in an academic setting

  4. Research Questions • How do engineering and computer science students capitalize? • Why do they capitalize? • What factors support or discourage capitalization? • What are the similarities and differences in capitalization, its supports, and its barriers, across gender, major, and university environment?

  5. Method • 8 focus groups consisted of: • Men and women • Computer Science and Engineering students • Students from a primarily white institution (PWI) and a historically black institution (HBI)

  6. Results (1) How do students capitalize? • Formal Activities • Student organizations • Tutoring programs • Career-building services • Internships and work opportunities • Informal Activities • Networking with peers and alumni • Forming study groups with classmates • Seeking out mentoring from faculty • Independent research

  7. (2) Why do students capitalize? • Intrinsic Incentives • Personal interest in the field • Peers provide emotional support and a “break” from coursework • Extrinsic Incentives • Resume building • Immediate payment • Enhancing skills to become more marketable

  8. (3a) What factors support capitalization? • Role models • Advisor and faculty encouragement • Active information about activities (3b) What factors prevent capitalization? • Time • Lack of information about events • Underrepresentation in the activity

  9. Gender • Women preferred formal activities • Student organizations • Men preferred informal activities • Networking • Opportunities for applied experience • Women often expressed discomfort at participating in predominantly male activities

  10. Major • Engineering majors prioritized forging professional contacts for career positioning • Peer and alumni networks • Participating in internships and work opportunities • Computer Science majors prioritized attaining technical skills • Keeping “ahead of the curve” by learning programming skills above and beyond their coursework

  11. University • The HBI seemed to offer a more supportive environment than the PWI • Advisors were more often described as proactive • Students were better informed about opportunities • Organizations targeting underrepresented groups had more presence • Gender was not discussed as often as a barrier

  12. Implications • STEM education is a pipeline for the workforce • Capitalization continues in the workplace (Maurer et al., 2003)

  13. Directions for Application • Programs should actively disseminate information about opportunities • Advisors should take a proactive role in encouraging capitalization • More experienced students who have capitalized should share their experiences with other students • Offer formal activities to attract/retain female talent

  14. Future Research • Empirical research investigating antecedents and outcomes of capitalization in an academic context • Differences in university type

More Related