Levels of Science Identity, Belonging and Experiences of Discrimination for Commencing Science Students at an Australian University

Q3 Social Sciences
C. R. Fisher, Christopher D. Thompson, Rowan H. Brookes
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

A key step in achieving gender equality in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) workforce is recruiting more women into undergraduate STEM degrees. Some disciplines, such as biology, have been more successful at this than others. Yet, gender issues at university still exist in these science disciplines, which may be deterring women from remaining in this career pathway. This case study at an Australian university explored known risk factors for attrition by surveying 215 first-year undergraduate science students. It also investigated how these factors differ for students in the ‘gender-balanced’ and ‘gender-unbalanced’ science fields. Findings showed that female students in both the ‘gender-balanced’ and ‘gender-unbalanced’ science fields begin university with low levels of belonging, and encounter experiences of discrimination early on. These findings highlight potential risk factors for attrition for incoming Australian science undergraduates, and some potential challenges tertiary educators need to be aware of within their first-year classrooms.
澳大利亚一所大学理科新生的科学认同、归属和歧视经历
在科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)领域实现性别平等的关键一步是招收更多女性攻读STEM本科学位。一些学科,如生物学,在这方面比其他学科更成功。然而,在这些科学学科中,性别问题仍然存在,这可能会阻碍女性留在这条职业道路上。这是澳大利亚一所大学的案例研究,通过调查215名大一理科生,探讨了已知的人员流失风险因素。它还调查了在“性别平衡”和“性别不平衡”的科学领域,这些因素对学生的影响有何不同。研究结果显示,无论是在“性别平衡”还是“性别不平衡”的科学领域,女学生在进入大学时都具有较低的归属感,并且很早就经历了歧视。这些发现突出了澳大利亚理科本科生流失的潜在风险因素,以及高等教育工作者在第一年课堂上需要意识到的一些潜在挑战。
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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CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
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