School of Global Policy & Strategy, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California, United States of America.
NBER, Cambridge, MA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Apr 5;14(4):e0214155. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0214155. eCollection 2019.
Workers trained in STEM are generally viewed as essential for innovation-led economic growth. Yet, recent statistics suggest that a majority of STEM undergraduates do not go on to pursue innovation-focused careers in their fields of study. We investigate whether STEM students who do not self-select into innovative tasks are doing so because they are less capable than their peers who do. We find that monetary inducement among STEM students increases aggregate innovative output, but that low-GPA students who were induced significantly underperform relative to low-GPA students who self-selected; however, induced and self-selected high-GPA students perform statistically the same. In contrast, words of encouragement appears to benefit those students with the lowest GPAs. Our results highlight the value of efforts to increase the pool of STEM students who pursue innovative careers and underscore the importance of interventions targeted at specific student subgroups to maximize the returns on those efforts.
从事 STEM 相关工作的人员通常被视为以创新为导向的经济增长的关键。然而,最近的统计数据表明,大多数 STEM 专业的本科生并没有继续从事他们所学领域的创新型职业。我们研究了那些没有自我选择从事创新任务的 STEM 学生,是否是因为他们的能力不如那些选择从事创新型职业的同龄人。我们发现,对 STEM 学生进行金钱激励会增加总体创新产出,但受到激励的低 GPA 学生的表现明显不如自我选择的低 GPA 学生;然而,受到激励和自我选择的高 GPA 学生的表现则在统计上相同。相比之下,鼓励的话语似乎对那些 GPA 最低的学生有益。我们的研究结果突出了努力增加从事创新型职业的 STEM 学生人数的价值,并强调了针对特定学生群体的干预措施的重要性,以最大限度地提高这些努力的回报。