Abstract

This paper explores the intersections of Students as Partners (SaP) and identity development. While identity and sense of belonging are known to be key factors for predicting success and persistence in STEM, less is known about how student partnerships can provide space for students to develop their identities. To explore this space, we focus on the Access Network, a coalition funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) of student-run programs that aims to improve equity in the physical sciences. Qualitative interviews with six student participants showed how SaP created opportunities for students to develop social justice physics identities, which allowed them to bridge traditional notions of what it means to be a physicist with their own social justice commitments. This paper contributes to the rapidly growing SaP literature by studying student partnerships at the scale of a national network of institutions, which contrasts studies that focus on more localized contexts, such as teaching and learning in a single classroom.

Highlights

  • Introduction2015; Nasir, 2002), learning physics requires opportunities for students to construct identities as physicists

  • Identity Given the close relationship between learning and identity development (Hand &Gresalfi, 2015; Nasir, 2002), learning physics requires opportunities for students to construct identities as physicists

  • We focus on how students integrate their multitude of identities to develop as social justice physicists

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Summary

Introduction

2015; Nasir, 2002), learning physics requires opportunities for students to construct identities as physicists. Without such opportunities, students may fall victim to negative stereotypes that reduce belonging and inhibit persistence (Good, Rattan, & Dweck, 2012; Master, Cheryan, & Meltzoff, 2016). Identities are dynamic, context-dependent, and individually and socially constructed (Eccles, 2009; Holland & Cole, 1995; La Guardia, 2009; Oyserman, Bybee, & Terry, 2006). While students do have individual agency in developing their own identities, they do so in the chilly climate in STEM (Cech & Waidzunas, 2018; Seymour & Hewitt, 1997)

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