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Engaging Undergraduates in Science Research: Not Just about Faculty Willingness

Engaging Undergraduates in Science Research: Not Just about Faculty Willingness. Kevin Eagan, Jessica Sharkness , Sylvia Hurtado , Mitchell Chang & Cynthia Mosqueda Higher Education Research Institute University of California, Los Angeles Association for Institutional Research Annual Forum

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Engaging Undergraduates in Science Research: Not Just about Faculty Willingness

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  1. Engaging Undergraduates in Science Research: Not Just about Faculty Willingness Kevin Eagan, Jessica Sharkness, Sylvia Hurtado, Mitchell Chang & Cynthia Mosqueda Higher Education Research Institute University of California, Los Angeles Association for Institutional Research Annual Forum Chicago, Illinois – May 31, 2010

  2. Background • College freshmen who aspire to degrees in science, technology, engineering or mathematics (STEM) have lower completion rates than their non-STEM major peers • Rates are even lower for underrepresented minorities 4-year STEM degree completion, by race (HERI, 2010)

  3. Undergraduate Research Experience • Provides students with hands-on training • Several benefits: • Improved ability to work and think like a scientist • Improved preparedness or desire for graduate study • Higher STEM retention rates • Develop close ties with faculty members • Few studies explore factors influencing faculty members’ decisions to involve undergraduates in their research

  4. Faculty Workload • Workload increase in last 25 years • Time allocations vary • By institutional type, rank, tenure status, discipline, gender, race/ethnicity and marital status • Rewards greatest for research-oriented faculty • Pay, tenure, Status • Implementing and maintaining research programs is resource-intensive • Requires time, support staff and institutional/ departmental support

  5. Faculty Mentorship • Mutual benefits for protégé and mentor • Few incentives for faculty to become mentors • Disincentives: research and publishing is rewarded, mentorship can be time consuming • Large classes, high student-faculty ratios can make it difficult to establish meaningful faculty/student relationships • Students tend to rely on faculty to establish mentoring relationships

  6. Conceptual Framework • Organizational Citizenship: • Exerting more effort on the job than is required or expected by formal role prescriptions (McManus & Russell, 1997) • Taking on undergraduate students doing research is often “above and beyond” the call of duty for faculty • Two primary components: • Actions and decisions targeted for certain individuals • Activities directed at an organization (Organ & Ryan, 1995)

  7. Research Questions • What predicts STEM faculty members’ likelihood of involving undergraduate students in their research projects? • What factors account for the variation across institutions in STEM faculty members’ average likelihood of involving undergraduate students in their research projects?

  8. Data and Sample • Data Source and Sample: • 2007-2008 HERI Faculty Survey • 4,765 STEM faculty members from 193 institutions • Dependent Variable: • During the past two years, have you engaged undergraduates on your research project (Yes = 1, No = 0) Engaged undergrads in research?

  9. Analyses • Hierarchical Generalized Linear Modeling (HGLM) • Appropriate for multi-level data with dichotomous outcome • Significant predictors reported as delta-p (Δ-p) statistics

  10. Results: Level 1 *We only show significant predictors.

  11. Results: Level 1 (cont’d)Other Scholarly Activities

  12. Results: Level 1 (cont’d)Undergraduate Goals and Institutional Climate

  13. Results: Level 2

  14. Discussion • Institutional context • Faculty perceptions of institutional climate • Disciplinary context • Face-time with undergraduates, goals for undergraduates • Funding

  15. Conclusion & Future Directions • Future research • Type and quality of UG research opportunities • Fuller accounting of faculty effort in involving undergraduates in research • Conclusions • Incentivizing behavior • Institutionalizing undergraduate research

  16. Contact Information Faculty and Co-PIs: Sylvia Hurtado Mitchell Chang Postdoctoral Scholars: Kevin Eagan Josephine Gasiewski Administrative Staff: Aaron Pearl Acknowledgments: This study was made possible by the support of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, NIH Grant Numbers 1 R01 GMO71968-01 and R01 GMO71968-05 as well as the National Science Foundation, NSF Grant Number 0757076. This independent research and the views expressed here do not indicate endorsement by the sponsors. Graduate Research Assistants: Christopher Newman Minh Tran Jessica Sharkness Monica Lin Gina Garcia Felisha Herrera Cindy Mosqueda Juan Garibay Papers and reports are available for download from project website: www.heri.ucla.edu/nih Project e-mail: herinih@ucla.edu

  17. HERI Faculty Survey 2010-2011 • Registration is now open • Go to www.heri.ucla.edu for more information about participating

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