1Stony Brook University.
Psychol Sci. 2013 Sep;24(9):1644-52. doi: 10.1177/0956797613476048. Epub 2013 Jul 1.
Although the perceived compatibility between one's gender and science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) identities (gender-STEM compatibility) has been linked to women's success in STEM fields, no work to date has examined how the stability of identity over time contributes to subjective and objective STEM success. In the present study, 146 undergraduate female STEM majors rated their gender-STEM compatibility weekly during their freshman spring semester. STEM women higher in gender rejection sensitivity, or gender RS, a social-cognitive measure assessing the tendency to perceive social-identity threat, experienced larger fluctuations in gender-STEM compatibility across their second semester of college. Fluctuations in compatibility predicted impaired outcomes the following school year, including lower STEM engagement and lower academic performance in STEM (but not non-STEM) classes, and significantly mediated the relationship between gender RS and STEM engagement and achievement in the 2nd year of college. The week-to-week changes in gender-STEM compatibility occurred in response to negative academic (but not social) experiences.
虽然人们感知到的性别与科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)身份之间的兼容性(性别-STEM 兼容性)与女性在 STEM 领域的成功有关,但迄今为止,尚无研究探讨身份的稳定性如何对主观和客观的 STEM 成功产生影响。在本研究中,146 名本科 STEM 专业的女性在大一春季学期每周对自己的性别-STEM 兼容性进行评估。在社会认知测量中,性别排斥敏感(gender RS)程度较高的 STEM 女性,即评估感知社会认同威胁倾向的指标,在大学第二学期的性别-STEM 兼容性方面波动较大。这种兼容性的波动预示着来年学业成绩受损,包括 STEM 参与度降低,以及 STEM(而非非 STEM)课程的学业成绩下降,并且在很大程度上中介了性别 RS 与大学第二年 STEM 参与度和成绩之间的关系。性别-STEM 兼容性的周际变化是对负面学业(而非社交)经历的反应。