Post-secondary paths in science for B.C. young women and men

The purpose of this thesis is to identify typical patterns of career destinations for young women and men in relation to their high school science preparedness. This is an empirical structural study that documents the way high school academic capital is turned (or not) into human capital for scie...

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Main Author: Adamuti-Trache, Maria
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/14342
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-143422014-03-14T15:47:37Z Post-secondary paths in science for B.C. young women and men Adamuti-Trache, Maria Science -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- British Columbia -- Longitudinal studies Women in science -- British Columbia -- Longitudinal studies The purpose of this thesis is to identify typical patterns of career destinations for young women and men in relation to their high school science preparedness. This is an empirical structural study that documents the way high school academic capital is turned (or not) into human capital for science and engineering professions. The study uses ten years of longitudinal data on educational and career paths of British Columbia high school graduates of the Class of '88. Correspondence analysis and other descriptive statistics provide a picture of students' participation in mathematics and science senior high school courses and post-secondary academic programs. School course choices, post-secondary educational attainment, specialization fields are correlated to respondents' high school science preparedness, parental education and gender. A major finding of this study is that high school science preparedness opens greater opportunity for students to attend and succeed along abroad range of post-secondary pathways. Still, thesis findings confirm the existence of a "leaking" phenomenon along the physical sciences and engineering post-secondary pipeline, especially for women as well as men with non-university educated parents. Equity in access and outcomes is discussed in relation to respondents' possession of cultural and academic capital, and in relation to gender inequality that persists within school and post-secondary institutions, the science community and society at large. Implications for further research emerge from the literature review and the interpretation of thesis findings. Longitudinal research needs to explore more directly the reasons why many young women and men who excelled in science at the high school level depart from the science pipeline sooner or later. A major conclusion is that the "critical mass" approach that directs attention toward creating a large supply pool to feed the science pipeline by encouraging more young women to enter the field of science is still a unilateral numerical strategy, and more has to be done to improve the retention and advancement of talented women interested in science. This thesis reinforces the need for an analysis of the culture of the science community and a revision of the leaking science pipeline concept that should be replaced by a more open non-linear model of science careers. 2009-10-29T17:48:58Z 2009-10-29T17:48:58Z 2003 2009-10-29T17:48:58Z 2003-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/14342 eng UBC Retrospective Theses Digitization Project [http://www.library.ubc.ca/archives/retro_theses/]
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Science -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- British Columbia -- Longitudinal studies
Women in science -- British Columbia -- Longitudinal studies
spellingShingle Science -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- British Columbia -- Longitudinal studies
Women in science -- British Columbia -- Longitudinal studies
Adamuti-Trache, Maria
Post-secondary paths in science for B.C. young women and men
description The purpose of this thesis is to identify typical patterns of career destinations for young women and men in relation to their high school science preparedness. This is an empirical structural study that documents the way high school academic capital is turned (or not) into human capital for science and engineering professions. The study uses ten years of longitudinal data on educational and career paths of British Columbia high school graduates of the Class of '88. Correspondence analysis and other descriptive statistics provide a picture of students' participation in mathematics and science senior high school courses and post-secondary academic programs. School course choices, post-secondary educational attainment, specialization fields are correlated to respondents' high school science preparedness, parental education and gender. A major finding of this study is that high school science preparedness opens greater opportunity for students to attend and succeed along abroad range of post-secondary pathways. Still, thesis findings confirm the existence of a "leaking" phenomenon along the physical sciences and engineering post-secondary pipeline, especially for women as well as men with non-university educated parents. Equity in access and outcomes is discussed in relation to respondents' possession of cultural and academic capital, and in relation to gender inequality that persists within school and post-secondary institutions, the science community and society at large. Implications for further research emerge from the literature review and the interpretation of thesis findings. Longitudinal research needs to explore more directly the reasons why many young women and men who excelled in science at the high school level depart from the science pipeline sooner or later. A major conclusion is that the "critical mass" approach that directs attention toward creating a large supply pool to feed the science pipeline by encouraging more young women to enter the field of science is still a unilateral numerical strategy, and more has to be done to improve the retention and advancement of talented women interested in science. This thesis reinforces the need for an analysis of the culture of the science community and a revision of the leaking science pipeline concept that should be replaced by a more open non-linear model of science careers.
author Adamuti-Trache, Maria
author_facet Adamuti-Trache, Maria
author_sort Adamuti-Trache, Maria
title Post-secondary paths in science for B.C. young women and men
title_short Post-secondary paths in science for B.C. young women and men
title_full Post-secondary paths in science for B.C. young women and men
title_fullStr Post-secondary paths in science for B.C. young women and men
title_full_unstemmed Post-secondary paths in science for B.C. young women and men
title_sort post-secondary paths in science for b.c. young women and men
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/14342
work_keys_str_mv AT adamutitrachemaria postsecondarypathsinscienceforbcyoungwomenandmen
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