Abstract

Increasing academic participation among students from ethnic-racial underrepresented groups in STEM yields societal benefits including ameliorating economic ramifications of the labor shortages in STEM, improving scientific innovation, and providing opportunity, access, and participation in high-status STEM fields. Two longitudinal studies with students from underrepresented groups investigated the role of active learning interventions in the development of STEM self-efficacy and intentions to pursue STEM in the future. Study 1 longitudinally tracked high school students participating in a 4-week geoscience program that applied active learning techniques ranging from hands on experiments to peer discussion. High school student participants displayed increases in self-efficacy and STEM intentions from the start to completion of the program, an effect that was observed exclusively among those who reported strong program quality. Study 2 examined the role of mentorship effectiveness with a sample of community college STEM students interested in transferring to a 4-year college. Students’ relatively strong self-efficacy and STEM intentions at the start of the semester remained stable through the end of the semester. Altogether, the present research highlights the role of positive, inclusive educational climates in promoting STEM success among students from underrepresented group members.

Highlights

  • Among all students who enter college with intent to pursue STEM, only 43% of Latinx and 34% of Black students earn a STEM degree, compared to 58% of White students (Riegle-Crumb et al, 2019)

  • We sought to understand the role of the intervention over time in STEM self-efficacy and future STEM intentions above and beyond any explained variance of year in high school and parents’ level of education

  • More advanced students may start the program with stronger STEM self-efficacy and future STEM intentions due to their advanced experiences with high school science courses

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Summary

Introduction

Among all students who enter college with intent to pursue STEM, only 43% of Latinx and 34% of Black students earn a STEM degree, compared to 58% of White students (Riegle-Crumb et al, 2019). The relatively high STEM attrition among students who identify with underrepresented groups (URGs; Black, Latinx, Native American, and women) is caused in part by relatively unwelcoming atmospheres that impair URG confidence and undermine STEM intentions (Seymour and Hewitt, 1997). Underrepresented Students’ STEM Self-Efficacy salient in STEM classrooms (Cheryan et al, 2015), especially under testing circumstances (Steele, 1997). To address the barriers that affect STEM attrition among URGs, researchers are seeking to identify which STEM education settings are conducive for URG success and why

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