The Impostor Phenomenon Among Postdoctoral Trainees in STEM: A US-Based Mixed-Methods Study

Q2 Social Sciences
Devasmita Chakraverty
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

Aim/Purpose This mixed-methods research study examined impostor phenomenon during postdoctoral training in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) through the following research question: “What are the manifestations of the impostor phenomenon experienced during postdoctoral training in STEM?” Background The impostor phenomenon occurs when competent, high-achieving students and professionals believe that they are fraud and will be exposed eventually. It involves fear of failure, lack of authenticity, feeling fake or fraud-like, denial of one’s competence, and is linked to lower self-esteem, mental health consequences, and lack of belonging. Methodology This study was conducted with US-based postdoctoral trainees (or postdocs) using mixed-methods approach. The study examined aspects of impostor phenomenon among 43 postdocs by converging survey data using Clance Impostor Phenomenon Scale (CIPS) and qualitative data from semi-structured interviews from the same participants. Both convenience and snowball sampling were used. Majority of the participants were White, female, and from science disciplines. Interview findings were organized into themes using constant comparative method and analytic induction. Contribution Findings pointed to the need for better designing professional development programs for postdocs that would: 1) address fears and insecurities due to impostor-feelings, 2) normalize conversations around perceived failure, judgment, and one’s lack of belonging, and 3) provide support with networking, mentoring, academic communication, and mental health challenges. Findings Survey results indicated moderate to intense impostor-feelings; interviews found six triggers of the impostor phenomenon during postdoctoral Postdocs and the Impostor Phenomenon in STEM 330 training: 1. not pursuing new things, 2. not making social connections, 3. impaired academic communication, 4. not applying, 5. procrastination and mental health, and 6. feeling undeserving and unqualified. Current findings were compared with prior findings of impostor-triggers among PhD students who also experienced the first three of these challenges during doctoral training: challenges to applying newly learnt knowledge in other domains, reaching out for help, and developing skills in academic communication verbally and through academic writing. Recommendations for Practitioners The office of postdoctoral affairs could design professional development programs and individual development plans for those experiencing the impostor phenomenon, focusing on strengthening skills (e.g., academic writing) in particular. There was an environmental and systemic dimension to the imposter phenomenon, perhaps more prevalent among women in STEM. The academy could devise ways to better support scholars who experience this phenomenon. Recommendations for Researchers Research characterizing the qualitative characteristics of the impostor phenomenon across the STEM pipeline (undergrads, PhD students, postdocs, and faculty) would help understand if the reasons and manifestations of this phenomenon vary among differing demographics of students and professionals. Impact on Society Organizations could focus on the training, development, mental health, and stressors among postdocs in STEM, particularly by focusing on career transition points (e.g., PhD to postdoc transition, postdoc to faculty transition), especially for those at-risk of experiencing this phenomenon and therefore dropping out. Future Research Future research could examine how to manage or overcome the impostor phenomenon for students and professionals, focus on disciplines outside STEM, and investigate how socialization opportunities may be compromised due to this phenomenon. Longitudinal studies might characterize the phenomenon better than those that focused on the impostor phenomenon at a single time-point.
STEM博士后实习生中的冒名顶替现象:一项美国混合方法研究
本研究通过以下研究问题考察了科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)博士后培训过程中的冒名顶替现象:“STEM博士后培训过程中的冒名顶替现象有哪些表现?”当有能力、成绩优异的学生和专业人士认为自己是骗子,最终会被揭穿时,就会出现冒名顶替现象。它包括对失败的恐惧,缺乏真实性,感觉虚假或欺诈,否认自己的能力,并与较低的自尊,心理健康后果和缺乏归属感有关。本研究由在美国的博士后学员(或博士后)采用混合方法进行。本研究采用Clance冒名顶替现象量表(CIPS)对43名博士后的调查数据和半结构化访谈的定性数据进行融合,考察了冒名顶替现象的各个方面。采用方便抽样和滚雪球抽样两种方法。大多数参与者是白人,女性,来自科学学科。访谈结果被组织成主题使用恒定的比较方法和分析归纳。研究结果指出,需要更好地设计博士后的专业发展项目,这些项目将:1)解决由于冒名顶替感而产生的恐惧和不安全感;2)规范关于感知失败、判断和缺乏归属感的对话;3)提供网络、指导、学术交流和心理健康挑战方面的支持。调查结果显示:有中度至强烈的骗子情绪;通过访谈,我们发现了博士后期间冒名顶替现象和STEM 330培训中的冒名顶替现象的六大诱因:不追求新鲜事物;没有建立社会关系;3 .学术交流障碍;5.不申请;6.拖延症和心理健康;觉得自己不配,不够格。我们将目前的研究结果与之前的研究结果进行了比较,这些研究结果在博士生中也经历了前三个挑战:在其他领域应用新学知识的挑战,寻求帮助的挑战,以及通过学术写作和口头交流培养学术交流技能的挑战。博士后事务办公室可以为那些经历冒名顶替现象的人设计专业发展计划和个人发展计划,重点是加强技能(例如学术写作)。冒名顶替现象有环境和系统的因素,在STEM领域的女性中可能更为普遍。该学院可以设计出更好的方法来支持经历这种现象的学者。研究人员的建议在STEM管道(本科生,博士生,博士后和教师)中描述冒名顶替现象的定性特征,将有助于了解这种现象的原因和表现是否因学生和专业人员的不同人口统计学而有所不同。组织可以关注STEM博士后的培训、发展、心理健康和压力源,特别是关注职业过渡点(例如,博士到博士后的过渡,博士后到教师的过渡),特别是那些有可能经历这种现象并因此辍学的人。未来的研究未来的研究可以研究如何管理或克服学生和专业人员的冒名顶替现象,关注STEM以外的学科,并调查这种现象如何影响社交机会。纵向研究可能比那些专注于单一时间点的冒名顶替现象的研究更能描述这种现象。
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
International Journal of Doctoral Studies
International Journal of Doctoral Studies Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
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