The impact of the impostor phenomenon on the math self-efficacy of males and females in STEM majors

In the undergraduate and working environments, some science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) areas remain dominated by males. The purpose of this study was to understand the gendered experience of individuals in STEM majors by assessing students’ math self-efficacy, impostorism (a feeling o...

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Main Author: Blondeau, Lauren Alexandra
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Sex
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26007
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-260072015-09-20T17:25:30ZThe impact of the impostor phenomenon on the math self-efficacy of males and females in STEM majorsBlondeau, Lauren AlexandraImpostor phenomenonMath self-efficacyPerceived parental influenceSexGender roleMath identityFuture aspirationsFuture expectationsIn the undergraduate and working environments, some science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) areas remain dominated by males. The purpose of this study was to understand the gendered experience of individuals in STEM majors by assessing students’ math self-efficacy, impostorism (a feeling of intellectual phoniness), and future goals. Based on prior research, an overall conceptual model was proposed and analyzed. Several related precursors including gender role orientation, perceived parental influence, math identity, and theories of intelligence were included in the model. Three hundred six undergraduates (64.38% female) in the colleges of natural science, geosciences, and engineering responded to an online survey addressing these constructs. Based on prior research, hypotheses were created proposing that females would report higher impostorism, lower math self-efficacy, and more femininity than males. I expected that masculinity, perceived parental influence, an entity theory of intelligence, and high math identity would predict the impostor phenomenon. Moreover, I hypothesized that the relation of each of these predictors to impostorism would be moderated by sex. For the next two hypotheses, I proposed that the four sources of math self-efficacy would predict math self-efficacy, but this relation would be moderated by impostorism. Finally, I expected that impostorism would lead to reduced future expectations and aspirations, but that this association would be mediated by math self-efficacy. Results indicated partial support of the study hypotheses, and a revised model was created. Both sexes reported similar levels of impostorism, but females had lower math self-efficacy and greater femininity than males. Masculinity negatively predicted the impostor phenomenon, while math identity and an entity theory of intelligence positively related to the dependent variable. Sex moderated the effect of perceived parental influence such that males’ impostorism was more affected by parental influence than females’. Emotional arousal was a strong contributor to math self-efficacy, but this relation was attenuated by impostorism. Coping with emotional arousal was positively associated with math self-efficacy; however, this association was significantly stronger for low impostors than high ones. Finally, impostors were less likely to expect to go to graduate school or work in a STEM-related field. Implications for schools and professors are discussed.text2014-09-18T20:06:25Z2014-082014-09-09August 20142014-09-18T20:06:25ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/26007en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Impostor phenomenon
Math self-efficacy
Perceived parental influence
Sex
Gender role
Math identity
Future aspirations
Future expectations
spellingShingle Impostor phenomenon
Math self-efficacy
Perceived parental influence
Sex
Gender role
Math identity
Future aspirations
Future expectations
Blondeau, Lauren Alexandra
The impact of the impostor phenomenon on the math self-efficacy of males and females in STEM majors
description In the undergraduate and working environments, some science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) areas remain dominated by males. The purpose of this study was to understand the gendered experience of individuals in STEM majors by assessing students’ math self-efficacy, impostorism (a feeling of intellectual phoniness), and future goals. Based on prior research, an overall conceptual model was proposed and analyzed. Several related precursors including gender role orientation, perceived parental influence, math identity, and theories of intelligence were included in the model. Three hundred six undergraduates (64.38% female) in the colleges of natural science, geosciences, and engineering responded to an online survey addressing these constructs. Based on prior research, hypotheses were created proposing that females would report higher impostorism, lower math self-efficacy, and more femininity than males. I expected that masculinity, perceived parental influence, an entity theory of intelligence, and high math identity would predict the impostor phenomenon. Moreover, I hypothesized that the relation of each of these predictors to impostorism would be moderated by sex. For the next two hypotheses, I proposed that the four sources of math self-efficacy would predict math self-efficacy, but this relation would be moderated by impostorism. Finally, I expected that impostorism would lead to reduced future expectations and aspirations, but that this association would be mediated by math self-efficacy. Results indicated partial support of the study hypotheses, and a revised model was created. Both sexes reported similar levels of impostorism, but females had lower math self-efficacy and greater femininity than males. Masculinity negatively predicted the impostor phenomenon, while math identity and an entity theory of intelligence positively related to the dependent variable. Sex moderated the effect of perceived parental influence such that males’ impostorism was more affected by parental influence than females’. Emotional arousal was a strong contributor to math self-efficacy, but this relation was attenuated by impostorism. Coping with emotional arousal was positively associated with math self-efficacy; however, this association was significantly stronger for low impostors than high ones. Finally, impostors were less likely to expect to go to graduate school or work in a STEM-related field. Implications for schools and professors are discussed. === text
author Blondeau, Lauren Alexandra
author_facet Blondeau, Lauren Alexandra
author_sort Blondeau, Lauren Alexandra
title The impact of the impostor phenomenon on the math self-efficacy of males and females in STEM majors
title_short The impact of the impostor phenomenon on the math self-efficacy of males and females in STEM majors
title_full The impact of the impostor phenomenon on the math self-efficacy of males and females in STEM majors
title_fullStr The impact of the impostor phenomenon on the math self-efficacy of males and females in STEM majors
title_full_unstemmed The impact of the impostor phenomenon on the math self-efficacy of males and females in STEM majors
title_sort impact of the impostor phenomenon on the math self-efficacy of males and females in stem majors
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26007
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