{"title":"How the physics culture shapes the experiences of undergraduate women physics majors: A comparative case study of three physics departments","authors":"Lisabeth Marie Santana, Chandralekha Singh","doi":"arxiv-2407.12995","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"We present comparative case study of three physics department culture from\ndifferent institutions using the experiences undergraduate women. The three\nstudies conducted in the United States include Johnson's 2020 study in a small\nphysics department at a small predominantly White liberal arts college, Santana\nand Singh's 2023 study at a large predominantly White research institution, and\nSantana and Singh's 2024 study in a medium-sized physics department at a small\npredominantly White private liberal arts college. Using synergistic frameworks\nsuch as Standpoint Theory, Domains of Power, and the Holistic Ecosystem for\nLearning Physics in an Inclusive and Equitable Environment and reflections from\nundergraduate women, we aim to understand how those in the position of power,\ne.g., instructors, have important roles in establishing and maintaining safe,\nequitable, and inclusive environments for undergraduate students. Their\naccounts help us contrast the experiences of undergraduate women in physics\ndepartments with very different cultures. This comparative analysis is\nespecially important for reflecting upon what can be done to improve the\nphysics culture so that historically marginalized students such as women and\nethnic and racial minority students in physics feel supported and thrive. In\nparticular, this comparative case study can be invaluable to understand the\npositive and negative aspects of the physics culture as they impact\nundergraduate women majoring in physics within these three departments. This\nanalysis can help other physics departments contemplate strategies to improve\nthe physics culture so that all undergraduate physics majors have validating\nexperiences while navigating their physics journey regardless of their\nidentities.","PeriodicalId":501565,"journal":{"name":"arXiv - PHYS - Physics Education","volume":"21 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"arXiv - PHYS - Physics Education","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/arxiv-2407.12995","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
We present comparative case study of three physics department culture from
different institutions using the experiences undergraduate women. The three
studies conducted in the United States include Johnson's 2020 study in a small
physics department at a small predominantly White liberal arts college, Santana
and Singh's 2023 study at a large predominantly White research institution, and
Santana and Singh's 2024 study in a medium-sized physics department at a small
predominantly White private liberal arts college. Using synergistic frameworks
such as Standpoint Theory, Domains of Power, and the Holistic Ecosystem for
Learning Physics in an Inclusive and Equitable Environment and reflections from
undergraduate women, we aim to understand how those in the position of power,
e.g., instructors, have important roles in establishing and maintaining safe,
equitable, and inclusive environments for undergraduate students. Their
accounts help us contrast the experiences of undergraduate women in physics
departments with very different cultures. This comparative analysis is
especially important for reflecting upon what can be done to improve the
physics culture so that historically marginalized students such as women and
ethnic and racial minority students in physics feel supported and thrive. In
particular, this comparative case study can be invaluable to understand the
positive and negative aspects of the physics culture as they impact
undergraduate women majoring in physics within these three departments. This
analysis can help other physics departments contemplate strategies to improve
the physics culture so that all undergraduate physics majors have validating
experiences while navigating their physics journey regardless of their
identities.
我们利用本科女生的经历,对三所不同院校的物理系文化进行了比较案例研究。这三项在美国进行的研究包括约翰逊 2020 年在一所以白人为主的小型文理学院的小型物理系进行的研究、桑塔纳和辛格 2023 年在一所以白人为主的大型研究机构进行的研究,以及桑塔纳和辛格 2024 年在一所以白人为主的小型私立文理学院的中型物理系进行的研究。我们利用 "立场理论"(Standpoint Theory)、"权力领域"(Domains of Power)、"在包容和公平的环境中学习物理的整体生态系统"(Holistic Ecosystem forLearning Physics in an Inclusive and Equitable Environment)等协同框架,以及女大学生的反思,旨在了解那些处于权力地位的人,如教师,如何在为本科生建立和维护安全、公平和包容的环境方面发挥重要作用。她们的叙述有助于我们对比文化迥异的物理系女大学生的经历。这种比较分析对于反思如何改善物理学文化,让物理学中历来被边缘化的学生(如女学生、少数民族学生)感受到支持并茁壮成长尤为重要。特别是,这项比较案例研究对于了解物理学文化的积极和消极方面,以及它们对这三个系中主修物理学的女大学生的影响,具有非常宝贵的价值。这项分析可以帮助其他物理系思考改善物理文化的策略,从而使所有本科物理专业的学生在物理学习过程中都能获得有效的体验,无论其身份如何。