Critical Studies in Education, Faculty of Education and Social Work, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Te Pūnaha Matatini, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
PLoS One. 2019 Sep 12;14(9):e0222357. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0222357. eCollection 2019.
Current trends suggest that significant gender disparities exist within Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) education at university, with female students being underrepresented in physics, but more equally represented in life sciences (e.g., biology, medicine). To understand these trends, it is important to consider the context in which students make decisions about which university courses to enrol in. The current study seeks to investigate gender differences in STEM through a unique approach that combines network analysis of student enrollment data with an interpretive lens based on the sociological theory of Pierre Bourdieu. We generate a network of courses taken by around 9000 undergraduate physics students (from 2009 to 2014) to quantify Bourdieu's concept of field. We identify the fields in which physics students participate by constructing a weighted co-enrollment network and finding communities within it. We then use odds ratios to report gender differences in transverse movements between different academic fields, and non-parametric tests to assess gender differences in vertical movements (changes in students' achievement rankings within a field). Odds ratios comparing the likelihood of progression from one field to another indicate that female students were more likely to make transverse movements into life science fields. We also found that university physics did a poor job in attracting high achieving students, and especially high achieving female students. Of the students who did choose to study physics at university, low and middle achieving female high school students were more likely to decrease their relative rank in their first year compared to their male counterparts. Low achieving female students were also less likely to continue with physics after their first year compared to their male counterparts. Results and implications are discussed in the context of Bourdieu's theory, and previous research. We argue that in order to remove constraints on female students' study choices, the field of physics needs to provide a culture in which all students feel like they belong.
当前趋势表明,大学科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)教育中存在着显著的性别差距,女性在物理学方面的代表性不足,但在生命科学(如生物学、医学)方面的代表性更为均衡。为了了解这些趋势,重要的是要考虑学生决定选择哪些大学课程的背景。本研究旨在通过一种独特的方法来研究 STEM 中的性别差异,这种方法结合了学生注册数据的网络分析和基于皮埃尔·布迪厄社会学理论的解释性视角。我们生成了一个大约 9000 名本科物理学生(2009 年至 2014 年)选修课程的网络,以量化布迪厄的场域概念。我们通过构建加权共同注册网络并在其中找到社区来确定物理学生参与的场域。然后,我们使用优势比来报告不同学术领域之间横向运动的性别差异,并使用非参数检验来评估场域内学生成绩排名变化(学生在一个领域内的成绩排名变化)的性别差异。比较从一个领域转移到另一个领域的可能性的优势比表明,女性学生更有可能横向进入生命科学领域。我们还发现,大学物理在吸引高成就学生方面做得很差,尤其是高成就的女性学生。在选择在大学学习物理的学生中,成绩较低和中等的女性高中生在第一年与男性相比,更有可能降低其相对排名。成绩较低的女性学生在第一年后也不太可能继续学习物理,与男性相比。在布迪厄理论和以往研究的背景下讨论了结果和影响。我们认为,为了消除对女性学生学习选择的限制,物理领域需要提供一种文化,让所有学生都感到自己属于。