Recognition Matters: the Role of Informal Science Education Programs in Developing Girls’ Science Identity

被引:0
作者
Roberts K. [1 ]
Hughes R. [1 ]
机构
[1] National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Florida State University, 1800 East Paul Dirac Drive, Tallahassee, 32310, FL
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Girls; Informal science education; Science identity; SciGirls;
D O I
10.1007/s41979-022-00069-3
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Girls and women remain stubbornly underrepresented in certain science fields. This underrepresentation begins as early as late elementary school as girls begin to (dis)identify with science because they do not see themselves as potential scientists because they cannot recognize themselves as belonging (internal recognition) and/or others do not recognize them as scientists (external recognition). Informal science education (ISE) programs have shown some promise for improving girls’ recognition as it relates to science. However, evidence is mixed on the influence of these programs because there is no commonality in structure or goal for programs that are compared. Hence, we know how specific programs influence girls’ internal and external recognition, but we do not know how this could be successfully replicated. The SciGirls organization has developed a set of research-based gender-equitable strategies that guide their programs and activities to improve girls’ identification with science disciplines. To better understand the efficacy of these strategies on participating girls’ internal and external recognition, we conducted a linear regression to compare pre- to post- external and internal recognition responses. The SciGirls programs we investigated improved girls perceived external recognition; however, their own internal views of themselves as science people did not change significantly. The findings support the use of the SciGirls Strategies for building external recognition for girls, which is an important piece of science identity development. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
引用
收藏
页码:214 / 232
页数:18
相关论文
共 54 条
[1]  
Archer L., DeWitt J., Osborne J., Dillon J., Willis B., Wong B., Science aspirations, capital, and family habitus: How families shape children’s engagement and identification with science, American Educational Research Journal, 49, 5, pp. 881-908, (2012)
[2]  
Archer L., Dawson E., DeWitt J., Seakins A., Wong B., Science capital”: A conceptual, methodological, and empirical argument for extending bourdieusian notions of capital beyond the arts, Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 52, 7, pp. 922-948, (2015)
[3]  
Archer L., Moote J., Francis B., DeWitt J., Yeomans L., The “exceptional” physics girl: A sociological analysis of multimethod data from young women aged 10–16 to explore gendered patterns of post-16 participation, American Educational Research Journal, 54, 1, pp. 88-126, (2017)
[4]  
Aschbacher P.R., Li E., Roth E.J., Is science me? High school students’ identities, participation and aspirations in science, engineering, and medicine, Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 47, 5, pp. 564-582, (2010)
[5]  
(2008)
[6]  
Avraamidou L., “I am a young immigrant woman doing physics and on top of that I am Muslim”: Identities intersections and negotiations, Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 57, 3, pp. 311-341, (2019)
[7]  
Avraamidou L., Science identity as a landscape of becoming: Rethinking recognition and emotions through an intersectionality lens, Cultural Studies of Science Education, 15, 2, pp. 323-345, (2020)
[8]  
Billington B., Britsch B., Karl R., Carter S., Freese J., Regalla L., SciGirls seven: How to engage girls in STEM., (2014)
[9]  
Chan H.Y., Choi H., Hailu M.F., Whitford M., Derouen S.D., Participation in structured STEM-focused out-of-school time programs in secondary school: Linkage to postsecondary STEM aspiration and major, Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 57, pp. 1250-1280, (2020)
[10]  
Calabrese Barton A., Kang H., Tan E., O'Neill T.B., Bautista-Guerra J., Brecklin C., Crafting a future in science: Tracing middle school girls’ identity work over time and space, American Educational Research Journal, 50, 1, pp. 37-75, (2013)