Broadening Participation in STEM College Majors
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Barbara M. Means, Digital Promise; Haiwen Wang, SRI International; Sharon Lynch, George Washington University
Version: View help for Version V1
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Project Citation:
Means, Barbara M. , Wang, Haiwen, and Lynch, Sharon. Broadening Participation in STEM College Majors. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2023-03-01. https://doi.org/10.3886/E185641V1
Project Description
Summary:
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The data and analyses described in this paper are part of a larger controlled longitudinal study of
the impacts of attending an inclusive STEM high school (ISHS). We define an ISHS as
a school or school within a school accepting students
primarily on the basis of interest rather than aptitude or prior achievement
and giving them more intensive mathematics and science preparation than their
state requires for graduation in order to prepare them for STEM college majors
and careers. The project is testing the effects of attending an ISHS using student surveys,
academic records, and interviews in Texas, North Carolina, and Ohio—three
states with significant numbers of ISHSs and strong administrative data
systems. Across the three states, the study has examined high school experiences and outcomes for students first surveyed in the
9th or 12th grade in 50 ISHSs plus students in the same grades in same-state
comparison schools identified through propensity score matching. Matched
students in ISHSs and comparison schools were surveyed a second time after 3 years (for
those originally surveyed as 9th-graders) or were followed up in state higher education records two years after high school graduation (for those surveyed originally as 12th graders). After controlling for differences in the characteristics of students
entering STEM and non-STEM high schools, the team has compared students on high
school outcomes related to college readiness and the pursuit of postsecondary
work in STEM. These include STEM interest and expectations as well as
course-taking, graduation, and achievement. This project also has examined alternative types of ISHSs and explored relationships between STEM
school design and implementation features and student outcomes. Policymaker
interviews and survey data from school leaders provided information on
school context, design, and implementation features and as well as state policy influences. Subgroup analyses have investigated whether different kinds of students benefit differently from the ISHS
experience.
Funding Sources:
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National Science Foundation (DRL-1817513 and DRL-1316920)
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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high school students;
college students
Geographic Coverage:
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Texas
Time Period(s):
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8/2010 – 6/2016
Collection Date(s):
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2/2014 – 6/2014;
5/2017 – 4/2018
Universe:
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Students attending inclusive STEM high schools in Texas between 2010 and 2014
Data Type(s):
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other
Collection Notes:
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File contains codes for Texas college courses and majors at Core STEM, Applied STEM, or non-STEM.
Methodology
Response Rate:
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Of
the 42 Texas ISHSs invited to participate in our study, 30 agreed and 27 of
these went on to administer the Grade 12 Student Survey in the spring of 2014. TEA
grade 8 achievement score records were found for 974 of the 1,132 ISHS students
who took the Grade 12 Student Survey (86%) and for 2,128 of the 2,400
comparison school students who took the survey (89%).
Sampling:
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Described in Means et al., Broadening participation in STEM college majors,
DOI: 10.1177/2332858418806305
DOI: 10.1177/2332858418806305
Collection Mode(s):
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record abstracts;
web-based survey
Scales:
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Several Likert-type scales were used to generate survey measures of STEM interest that were used in secondary analyses examining the sensitivity of the findings regarding higher education outcomes to attitudinal differences between students choosing inclusive STEM high schools and other kinds of schools.
Weights:
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Described in Means et al., Broadening participation in STEM college majors,
DOI: 10.1177/2332858418806305
DOI: 10.1177/2332858418806305
Unit(s) of Observation:
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Students, high school type, college enrollment, college major
Geographic Unit:
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Urbanicity of high school location
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