Abstract

In the United States, Black and Latinx students are underrepresented in STEM courses and careers due to a dearth of culturally relevant opportunities, which in turn are connected to broader issues of social justice. Place-based environmental civic science offers potential for addressing these issues by enabling students to apply their STEM learning to mitigate local environmental problems. By civic science we refer to science in which all citizens, not just experts, engage for the public good. In this paper, we report on a study in which we followed middle-and high-school science and math classes in urban schools serving racial/ethnic minoritized students as they engaged in an innovative contextualized curriculum—a place-based civic science model in which students work with STEM community partners to address an environmental issue in their community. We draw from students’ open-ended reflections on what they learned from participating in place-based environmental civic science projects that could help their communities. Thematic analyses of reflections collected from 291 students point to beliefs in the usefulness of science to effect community change. Students articulated the science they learned or used in the project and how it could affect their community; they made references to real world applications of science in their project work and made links between STEM and civic contributions. In their own words, the majority of students noted ways that STEM was relevant to their communities now or in the future; in addition, a subset of students expressed changes in their thinking about how they personally could apply science to positively impact their communities and the ties between STEM and social justice. Analyses also point to a sense of confidence and purpose students gained from using STEM learning for their goals of community contribution. Results of this study suggest that focusing on local place as a foundation for students’ STEM learning and linking that learning to the civic contributions they can make, cultivates students’ perceptions of how they can use science to benefit their communities. Findings also suggest that engaging students in place-based civic science work provides effective foundations for nurturing STEM interest and addressing the underrepresentation of youth of color in STEM.

Highlights

  • In the United States, people of color and people from poor and working class backgrounds are underrepresented in STEM education programs and professions (Conners-Kellgren, et al, 2016; National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, 2021)

  • Participating teachers and STEM community partners attended Southeast Michigan Stewardship Coalition (SEMIS) place-based education (PBE) Professional Development (PD), including sessions led by our team in which they learned about the design of the study

  • Our results suggest that youth from non-dominant backgrounds, for whom inequalities in STEM education persist, get engaged when they have opportunities to apply learning to solve local community environmental issues

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In the United States, people of color and people from poor and working class backgrounds are underrepresented in STEM education programs and professions (Conners-Kellgren, et al, 2016; National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, 2021). Minoritized groups endorse higher environmental concerns than White people (Leiserowitz et al, 2019), “green” STEM fields (e.g., environmental, conservation, atmospheric, and geosciences) remain among the least diverse (Pearson and Schuldt, 2014; Taylor, 2014) even relative to other science and engineering fields. This underrepresentation of marginalized students in STEM is linked not to a lack of talent but to imbalances in formal and informal STEM learning opportunities (National Academy of Sciences, 2019; Pinkard, et al, 2017) which in turn are connected to broader issues of social justice (Lachney and Green, 2021). Relevant to this special issue, these scholars advocate for place-based, contextualized STEM curricula as a way to broaden concepts of how STEM is done and what knowledge is relevant, as well as to question the purpose of STEM education (Lachney, et al, 2021; Vakil and Ayers, 2019)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call