Department of Curriculum and Instruction, Neag School of Education, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut, United States of America.
Department of Anthropology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2022 Mar 17;17(3):e0263561. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0263561. eCollection 2022.
Undergraduates with sexual and/or gender minority (SGM) identities, including lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/questioning, pansexual, intersexual, asexual, or additional positionalities, often face an unwelcoming STEM microclimate. The STEM microclimate includes the places students experience, such as classrooms or labs, and the people, such as peers or professors, with whom they discuss their STEM program. While previous work offers a framework of microaggressions faced by SGM people, and the behavioral, cognitive, and emotional strategies they use to react to them, little is known about the strategies SGM students use to persist in the STEM microclimate. We analyze interviews with 29 SGM STEM undergraduates to uncover how they fit in STEM, their experiences that affect fit, how social capital in the form of influential others affects fit, and the strategies used to deal with microaggressions and cultivate a supportive network. Using thematic analysis, we find that students vary in their feelings of fit, with students with gender minority identities experiencing more frequent and more severe microaggressions than students with sexual minority identities (which are often less visible). We likewise find that students with racial minority identities report compounding issues related to identity. SGM students with social capital, or a network of people to whom they can turn in order to access advice and resources, believe they fit in better than those without such capital. To support their feelings of fit, students use defenses against discrimination, including micro-defenses, wherein they change how they present their self to avoid microaggressions and/or surround themselves with accepting people. This research highlights the role of microaggressions and social capital in affecting fit as well as the micro-defenses students use to defend against discrimination. Our introduction of the concept of micro-defenses provides a way to theorize about micro-interactional dynamics and the site at which students defend against microaggressions so they feel more welcome in STEM. Implications provide insight into how SGM students can be supported in STEM as well as the institutional changes STEM departments and campuses can make in order to better support and include SGM students.
性少数群体(SGM)的本科生,包括女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别、酷儿/疑问、泛性恋、间性人、无性恋或其他身份,在 STEM 领域通常面临不友好的微观环境。STEM 微观环境包括学生体验的地方,如教室或实验室,以及他们与之讨论 STEM 课程的人,如同学或教授。虽然之前的工作提供了 SGM 人群面临的微侵犯框架,以及他们用来应对这些侵犯的行为、认知和情感策略,但对于 SGM 学生在 STEM 微观环境中坚持下去所使用的策略知之甚少。我们分析了对 29 名 SGM STEM 本科生的采访,以揭示他们如何适应 STEM、影响他们适应的经历、以有影响力的他人形式的社会资本如何影响适应以及用于应对微侵犯和培养支持网络的策略。通过主题分析,我们发现学生的适应感各不相同,具有性别少数群体身份的学生比具有性少数群体身份的学生(这些身份往往不太明显)经历更频繁和更严重的微侵犯。我们同样发现,具有少数族裔身份的 SGM 学生报告与身份相关的复合问题。具有社会资本的 SGM 学生,或者他们可以求助以获取建议和资源的人脉网络,他们认为自己的适应感更好,而没有这种资本的学生则不然。为了支持他们的适应感,学生们使用防御歧视的策略,包括微观防御,即他们改变自我呈现的方式以避免微侵犯和/或与接受他们的人交往。这项研究强调了微侵犯和社会资本在影响适应感以及学生用来抵御歧视的微观防御方面的作用。我们引入微观防御的概念,为研究微观互动动态以及学生抵御微侵犯的地点提供了一种方式,使他们在 STEM 领域感到更受欢迎。研究结果为支持 STEM 中的 SGM 学生以及 STEM 部门和校园可以进行的机构改革提供了见解,以便更好地支持和包容 SGM 学生。