1 / 27

STEM Equity Pipeline

STEM Equity Pipeline. Iowa Community Colleges: Expanding Options for Women and Girls in STEM August 21, 2009 Courtney Reed Jenkins National Alliance for Partnerships in Equity Education Foundation 608/886-0728 creedjenkins@napequity.org. Goals for today.

morty
Télécharger la présentation

STEM Equity Pipeline

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. STEM Equity Pipeline Iowa Community Colleges: Expanding Options for Women and Girls in STEM August 21, 2009 Courtney Reed Jenkins National Alliance for Partnerships in Equity Education Foundation 608/886-0728 creedjenkins@napequity.org

  2. Goals for today • Step 1: Document Performance Results 15 minutes • Review and edit data summary • Compare to data analysis at IHCC & HCC • Step 2: Identify Root CausesStep 3: Select Best Solutions90 minutes • Review root causes • Strategies that will work & that you want to do Break for 15 minutes • Step 4: Pilot Test and Evaluate Solutions90 minutes

  3. Document Performance Results (Step 1) • The “equity picture” is hard to establish because of the high number of classes we offer and because we have teach a large number of required courses for all IWCC students. • Female students in our programs are not specifically recruited. • We recruit directly from area high schools. • Female students in our programs are not formally supported.

  4. Document Performance Results (Step 1) • In some feeder HS programs, we serve equitable numbers of female and male students. For example, during this school year: • Web programming classes were almost 50-50 (female-male) • Networking classes were over 1/3 female • … which means we have a strong pool of candidates, female and male, to enter into our programs…

  5. Document Performance Results (Step 1) • We serve very few female students as completers in CS. For example, SY 2008-09: • 6% of Cisco Networking students are female • Web programming is less than 1/5 female • We do not retain 100% of female students in our classes. However, … • … the number of female students entering the programs are so small that it is hard to analyze the drop-out rate; • … we do not retain 100% of male students, either.

  6. Document Performance Results (Step 1) • The STEM pipeline, for females in the communities surrounding IWCC, appears to be “leakiest” between high school and community college. • What other data tells us this is true? • How is this leak different than other IA community colleges?

  7. Identify Root Causes (Step 2) • What barriers exist (“root causes”) to increasing our number of nontraditional female students – and what might solutions look like? • In other words, “Why are female high school students engaged in CS – and then don’t continue to IWCC CS?” • Education • Career information • Family • Internal/Individual • Societal issues

  8. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Education: Academic Proficiency • Successful programs:

  9. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Education: Access to and participation in math, science, and technology • Successful programs:

  10. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Education: Curriculum • Successful programs:

  11. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Education: Instructional strategies • Successful programs:

  12. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Education: School/Classroom climate • Successful programs:

  13. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Education: Support Services • Successful programs: • Informal support groups (HCC) • Support groups (Tools for Tomorrow, Madison Area Technical College; IA State – Women in Science and Engineering)

  14. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Career information: Materials and Practices • Examples of programs: • Michigan’s Breaking Traditions Award • Cisco’s Gender Initiative marketing materials • Changing College Freshmen’s Attitudes toward Women in STEM (NTAW2, p. 38) • U of O IT Program (NFAW2, p. 44, and NTAW, p. 39) • WOMENTECH at Community Colleges (NFAW, p. 195): • Community College of Rhode Island • College of Alameda

  15. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Career Information: Early Intervention • Successful programs:

  16. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Career information: Characteristics of an occupation • Successful programs:

  17. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Family: Family Characteristics and Engagement • Successful programs:

  18. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Internal/Individual: Self-efficacy • Successful programs:

  19. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Internal/Individual: Attribution • Successful programs:

  20. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Internal/Individual: Stereotype threat • Successful programs:

  21. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Societal issues: Media (negative) • Successful programs:

  22. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Societal issues: Media (positive) • Successful programs:

  23. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Societal issues: Peers • Successful programs:

  24. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Societal issues: Role Models/Mentoring • Successful programs: • IWITTS • Community-based Mentoring (NFAW, p. 49) • RISE: Research Internship in Science and Engineering (NFAW, p. 21) • MentorNet: http://www.mentornet.net/ • IA State Women in Science and Engineering (Carol Heaverlo, Outreach Coordinator, (515) 294-5883 orheaverlo@iastate.edu)

  25. Identify Root Causes (Step 2)Select Best Solutions (Step 3) • Societal issues: Collaboration • Successful programs: • Girl Scouts • IA State WISE • IMSEP

  26. Pilot Test and Evaluate Solutions (Step 4) • IWCC Implementation Plan • Root causes • Core values • Funding/resources

  27. Next steps & Evaluations

More Related