The Relationship Between Sense of Belonging and Student Outcomes in CS1 and Beyond

Sophia Krause-Levy, W. Griswold, Leo Porter, Christine Alvarado
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引用次数: 24

Abstract

Students’ sense of belonging has been found to be connected to student retention in higher education. In computing education, prior studies suggest that a hostile culture and a feeling of non-belonging can lead women, Black, Latinx, Native American, and Pacific Islander students to drop out of the computing field at a disproportionately high rate. Yet, we know relatively little about how computing students’ sense of belonging presents and evolves (if at all) through their college courses, particularly in courses beyond the introductory level, and little is known about how sense of belonging impacts student outcomes in computing. In an extension of a previous study, we examined students’ sense of belonging in six early undergraduate computer science courses across three consecutive quarters at a large research-intensive institution in North America. We found that women and first generation students have a lower incoming sense of belonging across all courses. When exploring sense of belonging’s tie to student outcomes we found that lower sense of belonging was correlated with negative course outcomes in terms of pass rates and course performance. We also found that it is less tied to student performance as students get further into the CS curriculum. Surprisingly, there was no indication that sense of belonging is predictive of retention in terms of persistence to the next CS course outside of the first course in our two-course CS1 sequence.
归属感与CS1及CS1以后学生成绩的关系
研究发现,学生的归属感与学生在高等教育中的留校率有关。在计算机教育方面,先前的研究表明,敌对的文化和不归属感可能导致女性、黑人、拉丁裔、美洲原住民和太平洋岛民学生以不成比例的高比率退出计算机领域。然而,我们对计算机专业学生的归属感是如何通过他们的大学课程呈现和发展的(如果有的话)知之甚少,特别是在入门级以上的课程中,对于归属感如何影响学生在计算机方面的成绩,我们知之甚少。在先前研究的延伸中,我们在北美一家大型研究密集型机构连续三个季度调查了学生在六门早期计算机科学本科课程中的归属感。我们发现,在所有课程中,女性和第一代学生的归属感都较低。当探索归属感与学生成绩的关系时,我们发现归属感较低与及格率和课程表现方面的消极课程结果相关。我们还发现,随着学生深入学习计算机科学课程,它与学生表现的关系越来越小。令人惊讶的是,没有迹象表明归属感可以预测学生对下一门CS课程的坚持程度,除了我们的两门CS1课程中的第一门课程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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