了解第一代大学生的校外经历、物理和STEM身份与工程可能自我和职业道路确定性的关系

Dina Verdín, Allison Godwin, G. Sonnert, P. Sadler
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引用次数: 8

摘要

这项全面的研究类别研究考察了9-12年级的校外经历如何预测第一代大学生的工程可能自我和职业道路的确定性。这项研究的数据来自一项关于拓展项目的大规模调查,该调查在第一学期的英语课程中分发,以收集对STEM和非STEM职业感兴趣的学生的一系列反应。我们运用结构方程模型检验了以下假设:1)校外经历会受到物理和STEM兴趣和认知的中介作用,并且校外经历对物理和STEM身份没有直接影响;2)这些身份随后预测工程可能自我;3)工程可能自我预测职业道路的确定性。我们的结构方程建模分析的结果支持了我们的假设,校外经历本身并不足以形成一个物理人或STEM人的身份,而是需要通过他人的认可和潜在的兴趣来调节。研究发现,物理认同和广泛的STEM认同显著地预测了学生在工程方面的可能自我。工程可能自我是第一代大学生职业道路确定性的显著预测因子。对于第一代大学生来说,未来可能的自我对学术发展、融入他们的实践社区、保留和未来职业认同的形成具有重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Understanding how First-Generation College Students’ Out-of-School Experiences, Physics and STEM Identities Relate to Engineering Possible Selves and Certainty of Career Path
This full, research category study examines how out-of-school experiences in Grades 9-12 predict first-generation college students’ engineering possible selves and certainty of career path. The data for this study came from a large-scale survey on outreach programs which was distributed in first-semester English courses to capture an array of responses from students interested in STEM and non-STEM careers. We used structural equation modeling to examine a set of hypotheses: 1) out-of-school experiences would be mediated by interest and recognition in physics and STEM and no direct effect will be found for out-of-school experiences on physics and STEM identities, 2) these identities subsequently predict engineering possible selves, and 3) engineering possible selves will predict certainty of career path. The results of our structural equation modeling analysis supported our hypotheses, out-of-school experiences alone are not enough to develop an identity as a physics person or STEM person, rather they need to be mediated through recognition by others and an underlying interest. A physics identity and a broad STEM identity were found to significantly predict students engineering possible selves. Engineering possible selves were a significant predictor of first-generation college students’ certainty of career path. Future possible selves for first-generation college students have important implications for academic development, integration into their community of practice, retention, and the formation of a future professional identity.
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