Abstract

How do students discover ecology? Answering this question is essential for diversifying the environmental workforce because scientific disciplines, such as ecology, are often not discovered until students enter academia and are exposed to different disciplinary options. Ecology, and many of the environmental sciences, have persistent and alarmingly low numbers of underrepresented minorities (URM; African American, Hispanic American, Native American, and Pacific Islanders), while other science and technology fields have shown progress in diversification. Why does such underrepresentation persist in environmental disciplines? Social factors such as sense of belonging, science identity, implicit biases, and stereotypes all have been explored and are known to influence the participation of URM students in science. The unique role of the field experience in environmental sciences as a “rite of passage” and “authentic” research experience is one important influence on how URM students experience ecology. Interventions using social elements such as belonging and sense of place are demonstrated ways to broaden participation particularly in environmental science fields, yet dramatic underrepresentation still persists. Here we review known factors affecting and enhancing the recruitment and retention of URMs in the sciences and focus on comprehensive strategies shown to be effective recruiting URM students into the environmental workforce.

Highlights

  • The diversity within the environmental workforce does not reflect the human communities they serve

  • Progress on increasing participation for minorities continues to lag in the earth sciences, including geosciences, ecology, and other natural resource fields, while the representation of white women in those same sciences has increased consistently (Ortega et al 2006, Taylor 2017, NCSES 2021)

  • Part 3 discusses the combination of social elements with core ecological concepts that can be structured in field experiences, can lead to ecological scientist mindsets that connect across multiple cultures around environmental learning and a sense of identity as a scientist

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The diversity within the environmental workforce does not reflect the human communities they serve. Elements influencing URM engagement include many different factors such as family support (Armstrong et al 2007), participation in guided experiences in nature appreciation (whether in urban or more natural field sites; Aloisio et al 2018), exposure to careers in ecology (Morales et al 2020), connecting environmental study in some way to interests in solving local and global community problems that affect minorities (Bowser et al 2020), and field research experiences as high school or college students in any type of environmental setting (Flowers et al 2016, Burrow 2018, O’Connell et al 2018, Beltran et al 2020). Part 3 discusses the combination of social elements with core ecological concepts that can be structured in field experiences, can lead to ecological scientist mindsets that connect across multiple cultures around environmental learning and a sense of identity as a scientist

Part 1: The field experience
Part 2. Brief interventions
Findings
Part 3: Identity and mindsets
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