Cultural identity central to Native American persistence in science

被引:0
|
作者
Nizhoni Chow-Garcia
Naomi Lee
Vanessa Svihla
Claira Sohn
Scott Willie
Maija Holsti
Angela Wandinger-Ness
机构
[1] California State University,Department of Inclusive Excellence
[2] Northern Arizona University,Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
[3] University of New Mexico,Organization, Information and Learning Sciences
[4] Northern Arizona University,Department of Biology
[5] University of New Mexico,Department of Pathology
[6] University of Utah,Department of Pediatrics
来源
Cultural Studies of Science Education | 2022年 / 17卷
关键词
Indigenous; Summer internship; Science identity; Cultural identity; Mentoring;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Native Americans are the least represented population in science fields. In recent years, undergraduate and graduate level summer research programs that aimed to increase the number of Native Americans in science have made some progress. As new programs are designed, key characteristics that address science self-efficacy and science identity and provide supports for Native American students’ commitment to a scientific career should be considered. In this study, we used sequential mixed methods to investigate the potential of culturally tailored internship programs on Native American persistence in science. We analyzed surveys (n = 47) and interviews (n = 4) with Native American students to understand their perceptions of themselves in relation to science research and how summer research experiences might develop science identities. Based on regression modeling, science identity, but not science self-efficacy, predicted intent to persist in science. In turn, science self-efficacy and Native American identity predicted science identity, and this suggests cultural identity is central to Native American persistence in science. In interviews, students’ comments reinforced these findings and shed light on students’ reasoning about the kinds of science experiences they sought; specifically, they chose to participate in culturally tailored internships because these programs provided a sense of belonging to the scientific community that did not conflict with their cultural identities. Based on our analysis, we propose an Indigenous science internship model and recommend that agencies target funding for culturally tailored programs from high school through early-investigator levels as well as provide inclusive programmatic and mentoring guidelines.
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页码:557 / 588
页数:31
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