Gómez Jennifer M, Caño Annmarie, Baltes Boris B
Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, Merrill Palmer Skillman Institute for Child & Family Development (MPSI).
Center for Institutional Courage, Palo Alto, United States.
Train Educ Prof Psychol. 2021 Aug;15(3):211-218. doi: 10.1037/tep0000336. Epub 2021 Apr 5.
The field of psychology must racially/ethnically diversify to create a workforce that can meet the needs of education, training, and interventions in an increasingly pluralistic society. Systemic bias in psychology doctoral programs' admissions process may partially account for relatively few psychologists being underrepresented minorities (URMs). The use of the Graduate Record Examination Quantitative score (GRE-Q) is one important modifiable barrier. The purpose of the current study is to go beyond replicating the association between the GRE-Q and desired doctoral outcomes by examining if a cut-off score for the GRE-Q as a proxy for potential to succeed in psychology doctoral programs disproportionately impacts URMs. Participants ( = 226) were psychology doctoral students at a Carnegie-classified Highest Research Activity (R1) large Midwestern university, who were admitted to graduate school from 2001 to 2011. Our findings show that, while controlling for undergraduate grade point average (GPA) and prior master's degree attainment, the GRE-Q predicted grades in two required graduate statistics courses and overall graduate GPA. Importantly, all students, regardless of their GRE-Q score, demonstrated competence in their statistics coursework, as assessed by their course grades. Moreover, we found that guidelines that bar admission into the psychology doctoral program for students with low GRE-Q scores would have disproportionately impacted URMs, resulting in 44% being barred admission versus only 17% of their White/Asian/Pacific Islander counterparts. Practical implications include introducing holistic review protocols into the admissions process, while educating faculty on how heavy emphasis on the GRE-Q contributes to inequitable exclusion of capable URMs.
心理学领域必须在种族/民族方面实现多元化,以打造一支能够满足日益多元化社会中教育、培训及干预需求的专业队伍。心理学博士项目招生过程中的系统性偏见可能是导致相对较少的心理学家来自少数族裔(URMs)的部分原因。研究生入学考试定量分数(GRE-Q)的使用是一个重要的可改变的障碍。本研究的目的是超越重复GRE-Q与期望的博士成果之间的关联,通过检验将GRE-Q的一个截止分数作为心理学博士项目成功潜力的代理指标是否会对URMs产生不成比例的影响。参与者(n = 226)是一所卡内基分类的最高研究活动(R1)大型中西部大学的心理学博士生,他们于2001年至2011年被研究生院录取。我们的研究结果表明,在控制本科平均绩点(GPA)和先前硕士学位获得情况的同时,GRE-Q能够预测两门必修的研究生统计学课程的成绩以及研究生总体GPA。重要的是,所有学生,无论其GRE-Q分数如何,根据课程成绩评估,在统计学课程作业中都表现出了能力。此外,我们发现,对于GRE-Q分数低的学生禁止进入心理学博士项目的指导方针会对URMs产生不成比例的影响,导致44%的URMs被禁止入学,而他们的白人/亚裔/太平洋岛民同龄人中只有17%被禁止入学。实际意义包括在招生过程中引入全面审查方案,同时向教师传授过度强调GRE-Q如何导致对有能力的URMs的不公平排斥。