外国同伴效应与Stem专业选择

M. Anelli, Kevin Shih, K. Williams
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引用次数: 20

摘要

自20世纪80年代以来,美国面临着STEM专业越来越不感兴趣和高流失率的问题。在同一时期,外国出生的美国高等教育入学率稳步上升。本文研究了外国出生的同龄人是否会影响美国大学生以STEM专业毕业的可能性。我们利用加州一所大型公立大学的行政学生记录,研究了由同一位教授教授的数学入门课程中外国学生所占比例随时间的特殊变化。结果表明,外国学生人数每增加1个标准差,本土出生的STEM专业学生毕业的可能性就会降低3个百分点——相当于在一门平均课程中,每增加9名外国学生,就会取代3.7名本土学生。选择社会科学专业的可能性增加,抵消了STEM的流失。然而,流离失所学生的收入前景受到的影响最小,因为他们似乎选择了具有同样高收入能力的社会科学专业。我们证明了比较优势和语言失调可能作为潜在的机制运作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Foreign Peer Effects and Stem Major Choice
Since the 1980s the United States has faced growing disinterest and high attrition from STEM majors. Over the same period, foreign-born enrollment in U.S. higher education has increased steadily. This paper examines whether foreign-born peers affect the likelihood American college students graduate with a STEM major. Using administrative student records from a large public university in California, we exploit idiosyncratic variation in the share of foreign peers across introductory math courses taught by the same professor over time. Results indicate that a 1 standard deviation increase in foreign peers reduces the likelihood native-born students graduate with STEM majors by 3 percentage points–equivalent to 3.7 native students displaced for 9 additional foreign students in an average course. STEM displacement is offset by an increased likelihood of choosing Social Science majors. However, the earnings prospects of displaced students are minimally affected as they appear to be choosing Social Science majors with equally high earning power. We demonstrate that comparative advantage and linguistic dissonance may operate as underlying mechanisms.
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