Online biology degree program broadens access for women, first-generation to college, and low-income students, but grade disparities remain.

Online education has grown rapidly in recent years with many universities now offering fully online degree programs even in STEM disciplines. These programs have the potential to broaden access to STEM degrees for people with social identities currently underrepresented in STEM. Here, we ask to what...

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Main Authors: Chris Mead, K Supriya, Yi Zheng, Ariel D Anbar, James P Collins, Paul LePore, Sara E Brownell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243916
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spelling doaj-5552859901354a12a3ac3aa966c1ce3a2021-03-04T13:00:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011512e024391610.1371/journal.pone.0243916Online biology degree program broadens access for women, first-generation to college, and low-income students, but grade disparities remain.Chris MeadK SupriyaYi ZhengAriel D AnbarJames P CollinsPaul LePoreSara E BrownellOnline education has grown rapidly in recent years with many universities now offering fully online degree programs even in STEM disciplines. These programs have the potential to broaden access to STEM degrees for people with social identities currently underrepresented in STEM. Here, we ask to what extent is that potential realized in terms of student enrollment and grades for a fully online degree program. Our analysis of data from more than 10,000 course-enrollments compares student demographics and course grades in a fully online biology degree program to demographics and grades in an equivalent in-person biology degree program at the same university. We find that women, first-generation to college students and students eligible for federal Pell grants constitute a larger proportion of students in the online program compared to the in-person mode. However, the online mode of instruction is associated with lower course grades relative to the in-person mode. Moreover, African American/Black, Hispanic/Latinx, Native American, and Pacific Islander students as well as federal Pell grant eligible students earned lower grades than white students and non-Pell grant eligible students, respectively, but the grade disparities were similar among both in-person and online student groups. Finally, we find that grade disparities between men and women are larger online compared to in-person, but that for first-generation to college women, the online mode of instruction is associated with little to no grade gap compared to continuing generation women. Our findings indicate that although this online degree program broadens access for some student populations, inequities in the experience remain and need to be addressed in order for online education to achieve its inclusive mission.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243916
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chris Mead
K Supriya
Yi Zheng
Ariel D Anbar
James P Collins
Paul LePore
Sara E Brownell
spellingShingle Chris Mead
K Supriya
Yi Zheng
Ariel D Anbar
James P Collins
Paul LePore
Sara E Brownell
Online biology degree program broadens access for women, first-generation to college, and low-income students, but grade disparities remain.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Chris Mead
K Supriya
Yi Zheng
Ariel D Anbar
James P Collins
Paul LePore
Sara E Brownell
author_sort Chris Mead
title Online biology degree program broadens access for women, first-generation to college, and low-income students, but grade disparities remain.
title_short Online biology degree program broadens access for women, first-generation to college, and low-income students, but grade disparities remain.
title_full Online biology degree program broadens access for women, first-generation to college, and low-income students, but grade disparities remain.
title_fullStr Online biology degree program broadens access for women, first-generation to college, and low-income students, but grade disparities remain.
title_full_unstemmed Online biology degree program broadens access for women, first-generation to college, and low-income students, but grade disparities remain.
title_sort online biology degree program broadens access for women, first-generation to college, and low-income students, but grade disparities remain.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Online education has grown rapidly in recent years with many universities now offering fully online degree programs even in STEM disciplines. These programs have the potential to broaden access to STEM degrees for people with social identities currently underrepresented in STEM. Here, we ask to what extent is that potential realized in terms of student enrollment and grades for a fully online degree program. Our analysis of data from more than 10,000 course-enrollments compares student demographics and course grades in a fully online biology degree program to demographics and grades in an equivalent in-person biology degree program at the same university. We find that women, first-generation to college students and students eligible for federal Pell grants constitute a larger proportion of students in the online program compared to the in-person mode. However, the online mode of instruction is associated with lower course grades relative to the in-person mode. Moreover, African American/Black, Hispanic/Latinx, Native American, and Pacific Islander students as well as federal Pell grant eligible students earned lower grades than white students and non-Pell grant eligible students, respectively, but the grade disparities were similar among both in-person and online student groups. Finally, we find that grade disparities between men and women are larger online compared to in-person, but that for first-generation to college women, the online mode of instruction is associated with little to no grade gap compared to continuing generation women. Our findings indicate that although this online degree program broadens access for some student populations, inequities in the experience remain and need to be addressed in order for online education to achieve its inclusive mission.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243916
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