Beltran Roxanne S, Marnocha Erin, Race Alexandra, Croll Donald A, Dayton Gage H, Zavaleta Erika S
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Santa Cruz CA USA.
Natural Reserve System University of California Oakland CA USA.
Ecol Evol. 2020 May 8;10(12):5184-5196. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6300. eCollection 2020 Jun.
Disparities remain in the representation of marginalized students in STEM. Classroom-based experiential learning opportunities can increase student confidence and academic success; however, the effectiveness of extending learning to outdoor settings is unknown. Our objectives were to examine (a) demographic gaps in ecology and evolutionary biology (EEB) major completion, college graduation, and GPAs for students who did and did not enroll in field courses, (b) whether under-represented demographic groups were less likely to enroll in field courses, and (c) whether under-represented demographic groups were more likely to feel increased competency in science-related tasks (hereafter, self-efficacy) after participating in field courses. We compared the relationships among academic success measures and demographic data (race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, first-generation, and gender) for UC Santa Cruz undergraduate students admitted between 2008 and 2019 who participated in field courses ( = 941 students) and who did not ( = 28,215 students). Additionally, we administered longitudinal surveys to evaluate self-efficacy gains during field-based versus classroom-based courses ( = 570 students). We found no differences in the proportion of students matriculating at the university as undecided, proposed EEB, or proposed other majors across demographic groups. However, five years later, under-represented students were significantly less likely to graduate with EEB degrees, indicating retention rather than recruitment drives disparities in representation. This retention gap is partly due to a lower rate of college completion and partly through attrition to other majors. Although under-represented students were less likely to enroll in field courses, field courses were associated with higher self-efficacy gains, higher college graduation rates, higher EEB major retention, and higher GPAs at graduation. All demographic groups experienced significant increases in self-efficacy during field-based but not lecture-based courses. Together, our findings suggest that increasing the number of field courses and actively facilitating access to students from under-represented groups can be a powerful tool for increasing STEM diversity.
在科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)领域,边缘化学生的代表性仍然存在差距。基于课堂的体验式学习机会可以增强学生的信心并提高学业成绩;然而,将学习扩展到户外环境的效果尚不清楚。我们的目标是研究:(a)参加和未参加野外课程的学生在生态学和进化生物学(EEB)专业完成情况、大学毕业率和平均绩点方面的人口统计学差距;(b)代表性不足的人口群体是否不太可能参加野外课程;(c)代表性不足的人口群体在参加野外课程后是否更有可能在与科学相关的任务中(以下简称自我效能感)感到能力增强。我们比较了2008年至2019年入学的加州大学圣克鲁兹分校本科生中参加野外课程的学生(n = 941名)和未参加野外课程的学生(n = 28,215名)的学业成绩指标与人口统计学数据(种族/族裔、社会经济地位、第一代大学生和性别)之间的关系。此外,我们进行了纵向调查,以评估基于野外课程和基于课堂课程期间自我效能感的提升情况(n = 570名学生)。我们发现,在不同人口群体中,以未确定专业、拟修EEB专业或拟修其他专业进入大学的学生比例没有差异。然而,五年后,代表性不足的学生获得EEB学位毕业的可能性显著降低,这表明在代表性方面的差距是由留校率而非招生率造成的。这种留校差距部分是由于大学毕业率较低,部分是由于转向其他专业而流失。虽然代表性不足的学生参加野外课程的可能性较小,但野外课程与更高的自我效能感提升、更高的大学毕业率、更高的EEB专业留校率以及毕业时更高的平均绩点相关。所有人口群体在基于野外的课程中自我效能感都有显著提高,但在基于讲座的课程中则没有。总之,我们的研究结果表明,增加野外课程的数量并积极促进代表性不足群体的学生参与,可以成为增加STEM领域多样性的有力工具。