Exploring the association between communicating about NMR spectra and acute awareness of stigma attached to one's gender among women in postsecondary organic chemistry courses

IF 2.6 2区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Megan C. Connor, Ally R. Parvin and Alex F. Browning
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Abstract

Women report that they must conform to masculine behavioral norms to progress in chemistry, with the necessity of adopting such norms pushing them from the field. Advancing gender-based equity within chemistry will thus entail identifying these norms, deconstructing them, and, ultimately, redefining them to be inclusive of all individuals. To support these efforts, this study investigates whether engaging in a traditional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) communication task versus a similar task with multiple identity-safe cues differentially impacts individuals’ gender stigma consciousness, or the extent to which individuals are acutely aware of stigma attached to their gender. Undergraduates (n = 543) enrolled in Organic Chemistry II at a large university in the southeastern United States completed an online NMR communication task followed by a version of the Social Identities and Attitudes Scale (SIAS) modified for use in chemistry learning environments (i.e., the SIAS-Chem). Participants were randomly assigned to one of two prompt groups prior to task completion: one group was told the task evaluates their NMR communication ability, and the other group was told the task was non-evaluative and used to understand the different ways people communicate. The results provide initial psychometric evidence of the SIAS-Chem's functionality and measurement invariance across prompt groups, providing preliminary support for its use in identifying chemistry practices that are potentially exclusionary of women. Further, women who were told the task evaluates NMR communication ability reported greater gender stigma consciousness on the SIAS-Chem compared to women who were told the task was non-evaluative, while there is no evidence of men scoring differently across prompts. Gender stigma consciousness was also associated with confidence during task completion among women who were told the task was non-evaluative. The findings have implications for the design of equitable assessments and instruction on NMR spectroscopy and future research on communication styles in chemistry.

探讨在高等教育有机化学课程中,关于核磁共振光谱的交流与女性对性别污名的敏锐意识之间的关系
女性报告说,为了在化学领域取得进步,她们必须遵守男性的行为规范,而接受这种规范的必要性迫使她们离开了这个领域。因此,在化学领域推进基于性别的平等将需要识别这些规范,解构它们,并最终重新定义它们,使其包括所有个体。为了支持这些努力,本研究调查了参与传统核磁共振(NMR)通信任务与具有多个身份安全线索的类似任务是否会对个体的性别耻辱意识产生不同的影响,或者个体在多大程度上敏锐地意识到与自己性别相关的耻辱。美国东南部一所大型大学有机化学II专业的本科生(n = 543)完成了一项在线核磁共振通信任务,随后完成了一份针对化学学习环境(即SIAS- chem)而修改的社会身份和态度量表(SIAS)。在任务完成之前,参与者被随机分配到两个提示组中的一个:一组被告知任务是评估他们的核磁共振通信能力,另一组被告知任务是非评估性的,用于理解人们交流的不同方式。结果为SIAS-Chem的功能和跨提示组的测量不变性提供了初步的心理测量证据,为其在识别可能排斥女性的化学实践中的使用提供了初步支持。此外,与被告知任务评估核磁共振通信能力的女性相比,被告知任务是非评估性的女性在SIAS-Chem上报告了更大的性别污名意识,而没有证据表明男性在提示上的得分不同。在被告知任务是非评估性的女性中,性别污名意识也与完成任务时的自信有关。这些发现对设计公平的核磁共振光谱评估和教学以及未来化学交流方式的研究具有重要意义。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
26.70%
发文量
64
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal for teachers, researchers and other practitioners in chemistry education.
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