The power of interest: minoritized women’s interest in engineering fosters persistence beliefs beyond belongingness and engineering identity

Abstract Backgrounds This study examined how developing an engineering identity through the interplay between interest, recognition, and performance/competence beliefs and establishing a sense of belonging supported women’s persistence beliefs in engineering. Persistence belief in this study is capt...

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Main Author: Dina Verdín
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-05-01
Series:International Journal of STEM Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40594-021-00292-1
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spelling doaj-3ac580c6c37449d7b3df4045444b43ac2021-05-09T11:47:00ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of STEM Education2196-78222021-05-018111910.1186/s40594-021-00292-1The power of interest: minoritized women’s interest in engineering fosters persistence beliefs beyond belongingness and engineering identityDina Verdín0Arizona State UniversityAbstract Backgrounds This study examined how developing an engineering identity through the interplay between interest, recognition, and performance/competence beliefs and establishing a sense of belonging supported women’s persistence beliefs in engineering. Persistence belief in this study is captured through women’s certainty of graduating with an engineering degree. Students’ levels of motivation, affective states, and actions are based on what students believe to be true. Data were gathered from a survey administered to engineering students at nine institutions across the USA. Only female engineering students were used in the analysis. Students were further grouped into categories based on the representation of their race/ethnicity in engineering; 121 women were identified as minoritized in engineering, and 252 were identified as part of the majority group in engineering. Structural equation modeling was used to understand how the development of an engineering identity and modes of belonging (i.e., belonging in the major and in the classroom environment) supported women’s certainty to graduate with an engineering degree. All latent constructs were examined for measurement invariance; partial measurement invariance was achieved. Equality constraints on the structural paths of the model were not enforced to allow for differences across groups. Results Seeing oneself as an engineer (i.e., internal recognition) did not support minoritized women’s certainty to persist toward degree completion, whereas this internal recognition supported majority women’s persistence. Belonging in the major and belonging in the classroom environment did not support minoritized women’s certainty to persist. Establishing a sense of belonging in the classroom environment supported majority women’s certainty to persist. Minoritized women’s persistence toward degree completion was supported by their interest in engineering and their confidence in performing well in engineering coursework. However, interest in engineering was two times more influential toward minoritized women’s persistence than their performance competence beliefs. Conclusion These findings provide educators with a nuanced understanding of how identity development and modes of belonging differentially affect women’s persistence beliefs. These findings suggest that educators need to understand the powerful influence minoritized women’s interest in engineering has on their persistence beliefs and create mechanisms to continuously reinforce interest.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40594-021-00292-1BelongingMinoritized womenEngineering identityInterestStructural equation modeling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dina Verdín
spellingShingle Dina Verdín
The power of interest: minoritized women’s interest in engineering fosters persistence beliefs beyond belongingness and engineering identity
International Journal of STEM Education
Belonging
Minoritized women
Engineering identity
Interest
Structural equation modeling
author_facet Dina Verdín
author_sort Dina Verdín
title The power of interest: minoritized women’s interest in engineering fosters persistence beliefs beyond belongingness and engineering identity
title_short The power of interest: minoritized women’s interest in engineering fosters persistence beliefs beyond belongingness and engineering identity
title_full The power of interest: minoritized women’s interest in engineering fosters persistence beliefs beyond belongingness and engineering identity
title_fullStr The power of interest: minoritized women’s interest in engineering fosters persistence beliefs beyond belongingness and engineering identity
title_full_unstemmed The power of interest: minoritized women’s interest in engineering fosters persistence beliefs beyond belongingness and engineering identity
title_sort power of interest: minoritized women’s interest in engineering fosters persistence beliefs beyond belongingness and engineering identity
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of STEM Education
issn 2196-7822
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Backgrounds This study examined how developing an engineering identity through the interplay between interest, recognition, and performance/competence beliefs and establishing a sense of belonging supported women’s persistence beliefs in engineering. Persistence belief in this study is captured through women’s certainty of graduating with an engineering degree. Students’ levels of motivation, affective states, and actions are based on what students believe to be true. Data were gathered from a survey administered to engineering students at nine institutions across the USA. Only female engineering students were used in the analysis. Students were further grouped into categories based on the representation of their race/ethnicity in engineering; 121 women were identified as minoritized in engineering, and 252 were identified as part of the majority group in engineering. Structural equation modeling was used to understand how the development of an engineering identity and modes of belonging (i.e., belonging in the major and in the classroom environment) supported women’s certainty to graduate with an engineering degree. All latent constructs were examined for measurement invariance; partial measurement invariance was achieved. Equality constraints on the structural paths of the model were not enforced to allow for differences across groups. Results Seeing oneself as an engineer (i.e., internal recognition) did not support minoritized women’s certainty to persist toward degree completion, whereas this internal recognition supported majority women’s persistence. Belonging in the major and belonging in the classroom environment did not support minoritized women’s certainty to persist. Establishing a sense of belonging in the classroom environment supported majority women’s certainty to persist. Minoritized women’s persistence toward degree completion was supported by their interest in engineering and their confidence in performing well in engineering coursework. However, interest in engineering was two times more influential toward minoritized women’s persistence than their performance competence beliefs. Conclusion These findings provide educators with a nuanced understanding of how identity development and modes of belonging differentially affect women’s persistence beliefs. These findings suggest that educators need to understand the powerful influence minoritized women’s interest in engineering has on their persistence beliefs and create mechanisms to continuously reinforce interest.
topic Belonging
Minoritized women
Engineering identity
Interest
Structural equation modeling
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40594-021-00292-1
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