STEM/Non-STEM Divide Structures Undergraduate Beliefs About Gender and Talent in Academia

Research and popular debate on female underrepresentation in academia has focused on STEM fields. But recent work has offered a unifying explanation for gender representation across the STEM/non-STEM divide. This proposed explanation, called the field-specific ability beliefs (FAB) hypothesis, postu...

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Main Authors: Kimberlyn A. Bailey, David Horacek, Steven Worthington, Ampalavanar Nanthakumar, Scott Preston, Carolina C. Ilie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Sociology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsoc.2019.00026/full
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spelling doaj-6914a94ec4fe4bbf9578781aae1328032020-11-24T23:05:15ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sociology2297-77752019-04-01410.3389/fsoc.2019.00026419539STEM/Non-STEM Divide Structures Undergraduate Beliefs About Gender and Talent in AcademiaKimberlyn A. Bailey0David Horacek1Steven Worthington2Ampalavanar Nanthakumar3Scott Preston4Carolina C. Ilie5Department of Philosophy, State University of New York at Oswego, Oswego, NY, United StatesDepartment of Philosophy, State University of New York at Oswego, Oswego, NY, United StatesInstitute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United StatesDepartment of Mathematics, State University of New York at Oswego, Oswego, NY, United StatesDepartment of Mathematics, State University of New York at Oswego, Oswego, NY, United StatesDepartment of Physics, State University of New York at Oswego, Oswego, NY, United StatesResearch and popular debate on female underrepresentation in academia has focused on STEM fields. But recent work has offered a unifying explanation for gender representation across the STEM/non-STEM divide. This proposed explanation, called the field-specific ability beliefs (FAB) hypothesis, postulates that, in combination with pervasive stereotypes that link men but not women with intellectual talent, academics perpetuate female underrepresentation by transmitting to students in earlier stages of education their beliefs about how much intellectual talent is required for success in each academic field. This theory was supported by a nationwide survey of U.S. academics that showed both STEM and non-STEM fields with fewer women are also the fields that academics believe require more brilliance. We test this top-down schema with a nationwide survey of U.S. undergraduates, assessing the extent to which undergraduate beliefs about talent in academia mirror those of academics. We find no evidence that academics transmit their beliefs to undergraduates. We also use a second survey “identical to the first but with each field's gender ratio provided as added information” to explicitly test the relationship between undergraduate beliefs about gender and talent in academia. The results for this second survey suggest that the extent to which undergraduates rate brilliance as essential to success in an academic field is highly sensitive to this added information for non-STEM fields, but not STEM fields. Overall, our study offers evidence that, contrary to FAB hypothesis, the STEM/non-STEM divide principally shapes undergraduate beliefs about both gender and talent in academia.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsoc.2019.00026/fullgender biaswomen in scienceunderrepresentation of womentalentSTEM/non-STEM dividegender stereotypes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kimberlyn A. Bailey
David Horacek
Steven Worthington
Ampalavanar Nanthakumar
Scott Preston
Carolina C. Ilie
spellingShingle Kimberlyn A. Bailey
David Horacek
Steven Worthington
Ampalavanar Nanthakumar
Scott Preston
Carolina C. Ilie
STEM/Non-STEM Divide Structures Undergraduate Beliefs About Gender and Talent in Academia
Frontiers in Sociology
gender bias
women in science
underrepresentation of women
talent
STEM/non-STEM divide
gender stereotypes
author_facet Kimberlyn A. Bailey
David Horacek
Steven Worthington
Ampalavanar Nanthakumar
Scott Preston
Carolina C. Ilie
author_sort Kimberlyn A. Bailey
title STEM/Non-STEM Divide Structures Undergraduate Beliefs About Gender and Talent in Academia
title_short STEM/Non-STEM Divide Structures Undergraduate Beliefs About Gender and Talent in Academia
title_full STEM/Non-STEM Divide Structures Undergraduate Beliefs About Gender and Talent in Academia
title_fullStr STEM/Non-STEM Divide Structures Undergraduate Beliefs About Gender and Talent in Academia
title_full_unstemmed STEM/Non-STEM Divide Structures Undergraduate Beliefs About Gender and Talent in Academia
title_sort stem/non-stem divide structures undergraduate beliefs about gender and talent in academia
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Sociology
issn 2297-7775
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Research and popular debate on female underrepresentation in academia has focused on STEM fields. But recent work has offered a unifying explanation for gender representation across the STEM/non-STEM divide. This proposed explanation, called the field-specific ability beliefs (FAB) hypothesis, postulates that, in combination with pervasive stereotypes that link men but not women with intellectual talent, academics perpetuate female underrepresentation by transmitting to students in earlier stages of education their beliefs about how much intellectual talent is required for success in each academic field. This theory was supported by a nationwide survey of U.S. academics that showed both STEM and non-STEM fields with fewer women are also the fields that academics believe require more brilliance. We test this top-down schema with a nationwide survey of U.S. undergraduates, assessing the extent to which undergraduate beliefs about talent in academia mirror those of academics. We find no evidence that academics transmit their beliefs to undergraduates. We also use a second survey “identical to the first but with each field's gender ratio provided as added information” to explicitly test the relationship between undergraduate beliefs about gender and talent in academia. The results for this second survey suggest that the extent to which undergraduates rate brilliance as essential to success in an academic field is highly sensitive to this added information for non-STEM fields, but not STEM fields. Overall, our study offers evidence that, contrary to FAB hypothesis, the STEM/non-STEM divide principally shapes undergraduate beliefs about both gender and talent in academia.
topic gender bias
women in science
underrepresentation of women
talent
STEM/non-STEM divide
gender stereotypes
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsoc.2019.00026/full
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