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Acknowledgments
The
Directorate for Education and Human Resources Programs (EHR) of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) is grateful to the National
Science Foundation (NSF), Alliances for Graduate Education and the Professoriate
Program (AGEP) for its generous support of this research project. We especially
appreciate the support of the NSF staff, including Norman Fortenberry,
Division of Undergraduate Education; Roosevelt Johnson, Human Resources
and Development; and Bernice Anderson, Division of Research, Evaluation
and Communications.
We
particularly appreciate the work of study group leaders and recorders:
Nathan
Bell, AAAS
Suzanne Brainard, University of
Washington, Seattle
Patricia Campbell, Campbell-Kibler
Associates, Inc.
Marguerite Coomes, Howard University
Edward Derrick, AAAS
Manuel Gomez, Universidad de Puerto
Rico
Eric Jolly, Education Development
Center, Inc.
Joyce Justus, University of California,
Santa Cruz
Frank Krar, formerly with AAAS
Catherine Millet, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor
Maresi Nerad, University of Washington,
Seattle
Willie Pearson, Georgia Institute
of Technology
We
extend a special thank you to the following individuals for prioritizing
the report's recommended new research areas:
William
F. and Marian E. Brazziel, Marian Brazziel Associates
Patricia Campbell, Campbell-Kibler
Associates, Inc.
Daryl E. Chubin, National Action
Council for Minorities in Engineering
Manuel Gomez, Universidad
de Puerto Rico
Anne MacLachlan, University of California, Berkeley
Kenneth Maton, University of Maryland,
Baltimore
Susan Millar, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Maresi Nerad, University of Washington,
Seattle
Willie Pearson, Georgia Institute
of Technology
Anne Swanson, Sonoma State University,
California, Retired
Our
appreciation to Senayt Assefa, Betty
Calinger and Jolene Jesse
at AAAS who helped edit the report.
And
a thank you to the editorial and design team at Potomac
Communications Group, Inc., Washington, DC.
Executive
Summary
Today
the United States is the world leader in the global science, technology,
engineering and, mathematics (STEM) enterprise, but other countries stand
ready to challenge this economic strength. One of the main reasons is
a shortage of U.S. workers to fill STEM jobs. Technically skilled workers
on H-1B Visas (guest workers) are now making up for the U.S. worker shortfall.
This supply of talent could dwindle in the near future as other nations
take steps to increase their own STEM productivity. Another reason is
that the majority of the current STEM workforce, White, non-Hispanic men,
is shrinking. In 1995, the projected percentage of White men in the overall
workforce was 36%. By 2050 White males are projected to be 26% of the
overall workforce, while in 1997 they represented nearly 70% of the STEM
workforce.1
In
our efforts to sustain U.S. productivity and economic strength, underrepresented
minorities (URM) (for the purpose of this paper defined as persons of
African American, Hispanic American, and Native American racial/ethnic
descent), provide an untapped reservoir of talent that could be used to
fill technical jobs. Over the past 25 years, educational diversity programs
have encouraged and supported URM pursuing STEM degrees. Yet, their representation
in STEM still lags far behind that of White, non-Hispanic men.
To
understand the reasons why this is occuring, the American Association
for the Advancement of Science Directorate for Education and Human Resources
Programs convened a study group meeting in September 2000 of 70 leading
educators and researchers in the STEM fields. We examined over 150 research
efforts related to choice of college majors, retention in STEM college
majors, academic mentoring at both the pre-college and higher education
levels, and pursuit of a STEM doctorate, as well as faculty positions.
At the study group meeting, we discussed key research, identified gaps,
and developed a research agenda for the future. Particular attention was
paid to the transition process from one level of academic achievement
to the next.
We
identified three research priorities for URM in STEM from the high school
years to the professoriate:
- Improve
methodology.
While
a substantial body of research is underway on URM in STEM, many of the
studies focus on patterns of underrepresentation in STEM or group differences.
Also, many studies are small and represent the perceptions of one group
of stakeholders in the system, in this case, students, faculty, or program
staff. We recommend more comprehensive studies that take into account
the interactions of all key players in the system, as well as studies
that follow cohorts of students as they move through the higher education
years into faculty positions.
- Improve
research linkages.
Many of the research studies previously conducted are not comparable
for a number of reasons, including differences in definitions of terms
or data collection practices. For example, in many cases, researchers
define URM in different ways. In terms of practices, researchers collected
retention rates and graduation rates at different times.
To
improve research linkages, we recommend developing data collection guidelines
and definitions, using common research methods and developing models
that will permit cross-comparison of findings in a wide range of studies.
We also recommend establishing a research consortium.
In
addition, we encourage organizations like the National Science Foundation,
and other government agencies to foster STEM education research coordination.
We also recommend that these organizations maintain and build databases
to provide information about the education and workforce experiences
of URM, women, and persons with disabilities in STEM.In our efforts
to sustain U.S. productivity and economic strength, African Americans,
Hispanic Americans, and Native Americans provide an untapped reservoir
of talent that could be used to fill technical jobs.
- Explore
new research areas.
Our analysis suggests that STEM education research to date is somewhat
limited. Part of our assessment focused on factors that facilitate progression
of URM into STEM higher education studies and the professoriate. These
include taking high-intensity and high-quality advanced mathematics
and science courses during high school, pre-college programs that boost
STEM skills, and higher education academic support programs in core
mathematics and science. Factors that limit progress include community
college STEM curricula that do not adequately prepare students for a
baccalaureate program, lack of undergraduate faculty mentoring toward
STEM doctoral programs, and low intensity of STEM curriculum at the
undergraduate level.
Developing
a better understanding of the factors that facilitate or limit URM STEM
progress requires:
Continued
collection of critical data. Researchers need to continually collect
data from higher education enrollment, STEM course taking, and graduation
for different groups, as well as data from different types of colleges
and universities. Curriculum alignment between community and four-year
colleges also should be monitored. Specific attention should be given
to monitoring the impact of changes in higher education admissions, retention,
and graduation policies at both the state and national levels.
Additional
research to better understand factors that facilitate or limit student
progression towards doctoral degrees and faculty positions in STEM.
We need to study the reasons why able and high achieving URM do not enter
STEM college majors or, if they enter, search for the reasons why they
do not complete STEM higher education degrees or go on in higher education
to pursue doctoral careers in academe. Suggestions for further research
include:
- Studies
concerning teaching and mentoring URM at the high school, college, and
graduate school levels.
- Studies
addressing how to create a nurturing institutional and STEM departmental
culture that values the knowledge URM bring to this enterprise.
- Studies
determining why URM, particularly those with high ability, do not pursue
doctoral careers in STEM.
Members
of our study group meeting hope that these suggestions will provide guidance,
and strategies for policymakers, researchers, educators, and public and
private foundation staff who want to build and sustain STEM education
research on URM. The better the quality of information we have on what
facilitates and what limits URM's progress towards STEM doctorates, the
better equipped we will be to create educational policies and programs
to address them.
Introduction
Building
a diverse workforce in science, technology, engineering and mathematics
(STEM) is increasingly important to sustaining the nation's productivity
and economic strength. Evidence already exists that the lack of United
States citizens in the STEM workforce is limiting economic growth, and
business has looked to H-1B Visas (guest workers) as a way to fill this
gap. However, recognizing the connection between sustained economic growth
and a technically trained workforce, other nations are aggressively restructuring
higher education and workforce policies to keep their nationals at home.2
These
worldwide education and workforce policy trends can have a negative effect
on the nation's economy, particularly if enough U.S. workers are not technically
trained.
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- The
process STEM undergraduates go through to select these disciplines,
especially determining which high school courses may influence their
decision to pursue a STEM major.
- Undergraduate
academic achievement and progress in STEM at the associate and baccalaureate
levels, including transition from associate to baccalaureate degree
programs.
- Transition
to master's programs in engineering and computer science, with consideration
of professional or terminal master's programs.
- Transition
to STEM doctoral degree programs, including transition from undergraduate
programs, as well as master's to doctoral bridge programs at Research
Extensive and Research Intensive universities.
- Graduate
school academic achievement and progress in STEM.
- Transition
from STEM doctoral to postdoctoral positions, transition to tenure track
and non-tenure track faculty positions, and issues around promotion
and tenure.
Each
of the six categories was assigned to an individual study group. The groups
examined a selection of key research papers within their assigned categories,
that focused on the STEM experiences of URM, women, and persons with disabilities
from high school to the professoriate. They also answered questions developed
to stimulate discussion and reviewed bibliographies of current research.
(See Appendix B for a complete list of discussion questions.) Each study
group had an assigned leader who was responsible for producing a written
report by the end of the meeting.
The
meeting produced several insights into areas of STEM research that call
for further exploration as well as three specific research priorities.
These recommended research priorities, with regard to URM in STEM from
the high school years into the professoriate are:
- Improve
research linkages, often referred to as community building.
- Explore
new research areas.
In addition
to summarizing the findings, this paper first outlines:
- What
we know about the existing research.
- Gaps
in current research on URM in STEM.
We
hope that it will provide guidance to researchers about methodology, areas
of study, and the most effective ways to share information. In addition,
we hope these suggestions will provide guidance and strategies for policymakers,
educational leaders, and public and private foundation staff who want
to build and sustain STEM education research on URM.
What
We Know from the Existing Research
The
following is an assessment of what we know from the existing research
on URM in STEM for the high school, undergraduate, and graduate years,
as well as the professoriate. With input from the study group participants,
over 300 quantitative and qualitative studies were identified, including
ongoing data reporting and studies done by the U.S. Department of Education,
the National Science Foundation, private testing groups, and STEM professional
associations or groups.
These
findings are drawn from large data collection efforts, as well as smaller
studies about perceptions of students, faculty, or special program staff.
They provide information about URM students as they progress from high
school to professional STEM careers. They explain the variables that contribute
to successful completion of STEM degrees, the barriers to degree attainment,
and, when understood, the reasons for attrition from higher education,
as well as barriers to the professoriate. The findings are not necessarily
ranked in order of importance.
Findings
for the High School Years
- The
three most important variables that contribute to bachelor's degree
completion are intensity and quality of the secondary school curriculum,
test scores, and class rank/grade point average.7
- National
and state school educational policies may limit resources for K-12 schools,
particularly in science.8
- Taking
mathematics courses beyond Algebra II, such as trigonometry or pre-calculus,
is particularly key for African American and Hispanic American students.9
- Factors
that are associated with racial/ethnic differences on standardized and
college admissions tests, as well as entry into STEM majors include:
- The
number of advanced mathematics and science courses taken by students
and offered by high schools.
- Parental
income, wealth, and education.
- Out-of-school
opportunities.10
- African
American and Hispanic college students with high grade point averages
and SAT scores above 600 typically do not pursue STEM college majors
for reasons including poor teaching in STEM courses, lack of encouragement
from teachers or parents, and self-perception of their own inability
to be successful in STEM majors.11
- Pre-college
programs for URM are shown to increase college and university enrollment
of students in STEM majors.12
Findings
for the Undergraduate Years
- URM
are more likely to drop out of college for a variety of reasons, including
financial difficulties, poor high school preparation, poor college teaching,
low faculty expectations, and an inflexible curriculum.13
- Examples
exist of college and university STEM academic support services and programs
that, if implemented with clear learning objectives and appropriate
student participation, can increase retention of URM.14
- Data
from the 1980s High School and Beyond studies indicate that 58%
of bachelor's degree recipients attended more than one institution,
with dramatic increases in the proportion of students attending more
than two institutions. Students starting in highly selective four-year
colleges and in open door institutions have the highest multi-institutional
attendance for different reasons.15
Findings
for the Graduate School Years
- Bans
on use of affirmative action for graduate admissions had an adverse
impact on first-year graduate school enrollments in Research I universities.
Enrollments dropped precipitously during the 1997-1998 school year and
rebounded in 1998-1999; however, these rates still did not match the
1996 rates.16
- Negative
variables for progression to graduate school include loans, debt burden,
and age; while a negative barrier that affects primarily women is having
dependent children.17
- Positive
variables for progression to graduate school include strong college
grade point averages, a bachelor's degree from a highly selective school,
a bachelor's degree from a school with large numbers of graduate students,
intent to go to graduate school, and parents with a high level of education.18
- STEM
pre-graduate school bridges and undergraduate research programs for
minorities and women increased STEM graduate school enrollment.19
- The
choice of a doctoral career in science (as opposed to careers in medicine,
law, and business) may be affected by the burden of educational debt,
the opportunity cost of required graduate education, expected remuneration
rates in the career, and benefit accumulations, particularly for URM
students.20
- Positive
factors that affect persistence and completion of doctoral degrees in
STEM include intellectual capital, financial aid, interactions with
faculty, peer support, and minority role models.21
Findings
for the Faculty Years
Barriers
to advancement and retention of URM in post-doctoral and tenure track
faculty positions include:
- Fewer
interactions with faculty peers.
- A
belief that they were hired because of affirmative action and not for
their capability to do science.
- Lack
of an influential mentor or sponsor.
- Difficulty
with securing grants, even with a track record for high-quality research.22
Gaps in Current
Research
These
current research findings provide a snapshot, albeit an incomplete one,
of students, faculty, or special program staff within the STEM disciplines.
The following is a summary of the factors that facilitate or limit
progress of URM students within STEM. These factors present an overview
of current research and can be used to identify gaps and new areas of
study.
Factors
that facilitate progression of URM into STEM post-secondary studies
include:
- Taking
high-intensity and high-quality advanced mathematics and science courses.
- STEM
pre-college programs that include enhanced STEM high school curricula,
admissions test preparation, and early introduction to STEM careers.
- Post-secondary
STEM support programs, particularly in calculus, chemistry, and physics,
that increase undergraduate retention.
- Financial
aid packages that reduce debt burden.
- STEM
pre-graduate school bridge programs that increase enrollment in Ph.D.
programs.
Factors
that limit the progression of URM students into STEM post-secondary
studies and professorial positions include:
- Emerging
state policies that impede K-12 reform or bans against use of affirmative
action in post-secondary admissions.
- High
school STEM teaching that lacks rigor, as well as mentoring toward doctoral
STEM careers.
- Community
colleges' STEM curricula that may not be aligned with bachelor of science
degree-granting colleges and universities.
- College
and university STEM teaching that often does not take into account students'
different learning styles.
- Lack
of undergraduate faculty mentoring towards doctoral STEM careers.
- Low
intensity and quality of STEM curricula at the undergraduate level.
- Undergraduate
STEM curricula that may not be aligned with graduate school STEM curricula.
- The
mistaken belief that race or ethnicity, rather than capability, plays
a major role in selection or employment in the higher education sector.
Given
the limiting factors to progression of URM in STEM, there is a need to:
- Continually
collect data on access of African American, Hispanic American, and Native
American high school students to mathematics and science courses needed
for post-secondary majors in STEM. Data also should be collected on
student access to certified science and mathematics high school teachers
and high-quality mathematics and science courses in high school.
- Monitor
the annual college and university enrollment and degree attainment of
URM in STEM at all educational levels, given evolving state higher educational
policies related to bans on use of affirmative action.
- Monitor
how community colleges are aligning their STEM curricula with colleges
and universities to which students usually transfer.
- Monitor
state policies related to STEM curricula alignment between community
colleges and bachelor of science degree-granting colleges and universities.
Also
there are a number of areas limiting student progression that we need
to better understand. They include:
- The
teaching/mentoring and learning interactions between high school science
and mathematics teachers and African American, Hispanic American, and
Native American students, as well as students from different socioeconomic
groups.
- The
teaching/mentoring and learning interactions between college and university
faculty and URM students in STEM.
- How
to create an institutional and STEM departmental culture that will nurture
and develop the talents of URM students.
- How
to create a scientific research culture that will recognize and value
the knowledge and perspectives that URM bring to the enterprise.
- How
to interest African American, Hispanic American, and Native American
students in doctoral careers in STEM, especially those with high ability.
Improve Methodology in Research on URM
in STEM
A
1999 College Board report states that few of the numerous programs to
improve academic outcomes of URM have undergone extensive external evaluation.23
The
current research base provides limited potential for thorough analysis
for several reasons. First, there are no established data collection guidelines
for researchers who study URM in STEM. In other words, most of the data
in this research base is not comparable due to differences in methods,
definitions of terms (e.g., retention, URM), and other factors. Also,
many of the studies on URM in STEM are sample surveys with differing degrees
of validity and reliability.
The
studies conducted are particularly limited in terms of disaggregated information
about different racial/ethnic groups, as well as different STEM disciplines.
As a result, it is hard to discern which factors are generic to all STEM
students or faculty, and which are group or discipline specific.
In
many studies, information on African Americans and Hispanic Americans
is included; however, information on Native Americans or on gender within
racial/ethnic groups is not reported. This occurs primarily because the
cell size of these populations is too small to report statistically meaningful
data. Further, no studies were found on minority students with disabilities
in STEM.
The
studies also do not examine the full spectrum of colleges and universities.
For example, many of the studies are conducted at Research Extensive and
Research Intensive universities, with few looking at community colleges,
Historically Black Colleges and Universities, institutions serving concentrations
of Hispanic Americans, tribal colleges, women's colleges, or colleges
and universities that target or serve persons with disabilities.
Much
of the research has focused on patterns of group differences or underrepresentation.
However, very few of these studies focus on
the complexity of the undergraduate or graduate educational experience
of URM in STEM.24
Recommendations
for Improving Methodology
In
terms of methodology, the research designed to investigate and explain
differences must take into account the complexity of the STEM disciplines.
That is, the research should be multivariate and multi-leveled (e.g.,
path-analysis, structural equations). Researchers should ensure that their
attempts to reduce the number of variables and interactions do not oversimplify
important research questions.
The
research also must be comprehensive, incorporating ecological models that
include a complementary set of individual and systemic approaches. Strategies
such as cohorting should be used and, ideally, information should be collected
from all involved in the educational process, including students, university
administrators, department faculty and staff, and STEM intervention program
staff.
Specific
recommendations for improving methodology include:
- Research
studies should include data that is longitudinal, retrospective, small-scale,
institutional-based, critical event, or action-oriented.
- Data
should be disaggregated by race/ethnicity, gender and disability within
race/ethnicity, college and university types, STEM disciplines, student
achievement levels, college persisters and non-persisters, age, and
socioeconomic status, where appropriate.
- Comparative
studies are needed at the post-secondary level between the different
groups of students and faculty so that it can be discerned which problems
in STEM are generic, and which are group specific, including gender
and disability within racial/ethnic groups.
- Given
the open admissions model in community colleges, a different way of
looking at the transfer rate is needed, since all students do not go
to community colleges with the goal of transferring to a four-year institution.
- Given
the degree of institution and field switching by students, new ways
of looking at retention and graduation rates are needed.
- More
sophisticated outcome evaluations of federal and non-federal intervention
programs are needed, including requirements for inclusion of comparison
samples, and the use of state-of-the-art social science evaluation models
beyond mere tracking.
- Alternatives
to the pipeline metaphor to analyze current data are needed to account
for "stepping-out" or interruption of post-secondary education degree
attainment. These models must account for university and field switching.
Improve Research Linkages and Community
Building
Among Researchers
One
of the biggest problems identified was the lack of data collection guidelines
for researchers who are studying human resources in STEM. Also, more opportunities
are needed for early communication and information sharing among STEM
researchers. Although data are shared in a number of venues upon completion,
researchers do not communicate as often during the study development,
collection of data and analysis of results phases. Researchers need to
communicate more effectively with each other at all stages of the research
process so they can share methodology and findings.
Building
a community of researchers who confer regularly may help to improve methodol-ogy
and bring us closer to understanding factors that limit the STEM talent
pool. To this end, recommendations for community building include:
- Establish
a consortium of researchers studying the STEM experiences and achievements
of URM from the high school years to academe.
- Develop
guidelines for coordinating both quantitative and qualitative high school
and post-secondary school research on URM in STEM to allow cross-research
or cross-institutional comparisons. These guidelines should include
developing common definitions of enrollment, community college transfer
rates, attrition, and types of disability, as well as definitions of
who should or should not be counted as a scientist or engineer (e.g.,
someone with a master's in business practicing in a high tech company,
physicians, patent lawyers, etc.). They also should include common sets
of data collection protocols across STEM intervention program areas
as needed to allow for cross-program analysis.
- Encourage
granting agencies to foster research coordination through synergy and
to smooth the path for data release from colleges and universities that
are their grant recipients.
- Maintain
and build National Science Foundation databases on minorities, women,
and persons with disabilities that produce disaggregated STEM data by
gender, race, and disability, as well as maintain and build the databases
of the U.S. Department of Education's National Center for Education
Statistics.
Explore New Research Areas
Tables
One to Four provide information on addressing the gaps in STEM research.
They recommend areas of new and continuing research on the STEM experiences
and achievements of URM from the high school years into the professoriate.
While all research topics mentioned are important, several study group
participants recommended seven specific areas as having the highest priority
for funding.
These
areas are:
1. The
need to understand STEM talent spotting and development in colleges
and universities.
Specific
data collection activities and research needed in this area include:
- Study
institutional and departmental admissions criteria and processes.
More needs to be known about undergraduate and graduate school admissions
criteria, including the predictive value of admissions tests and grade
point averages. Also, we need to better understand educational institutions
and STEM departments that have adopted a talent development approach
to doctoral recruitment and training. Too many STEM programs are still
wedded to a Darwinian concept of doctoral training.
- Collect
departmental data by race/ethnicity, gender, and disability. Institutions
should provide systematic information by department, including information
about their student recruits, enrollees, and degree recipients, including
post-degree positions. In addition, data needs to be collected on
STEM post-doctoral researchers and faculty recruitment, promotion,
and tenure within departments.
- Study
departmental policies, programs, and practices. It is at the department
level that policies, intervention programs, teaching, and learning
take place. Therefore the way departmental organization and culture
foster and impede the advancement of URM in STEM fields must be understood.
- Study
STEM faculty teaching and mentoring. Studies are needed to examine
the impact of STEM faculty teaching and mentoring on students' persistence
and STEM degree attainment at both the undergraduate and graduate
levels. This includes the extent to which there is faculty understanding,
knowledge, and practice of racial/ethnic diversity. Faculty are, perhaps,
the single most important influence on students, and much more needs
to be understood about factors related to their impact on students.
2. The
need to better understand STEM community college transfers.
Since
many URM and students with disabilities begin their college careers
in the community college system, we need to better understand the community
college transfer process, including STEM-related policies, practices,
and courses that are needed to successfully transfer to bachelor of
science degree-granting colleges and universities.
3. The
need to study STEM curricula and instruction at different types of colleges
and universities.
Better
understanding of the quality of instruction and curriculum at different
types of institutions is needed. Studies should be conducted at community
colleges, Historically Black Colleges and Universities, institutions
serving a concentration of Hispanic Americans, tribal colleges, women's
colleges, and colleges and universities that target or serve significant
populations of disabled students. In addition, the integration of technology
into STEM curricula should be examined.
4. The
need to examine the changing culture, structure, and economics of colleges
and universities on STEM.
We
need a better understanding of the present and future context within
academia if URM are to succeed in STEM, including the theory that "multicontextuality"
can improve teaching and learning, particularly for Hispanic Americans
and other URM.25 Another topic to be explored in this area
includes how hiring URM part-time instructors, adjunct faculty, and
research associates affects recruitment and retention into tenured faculty
positions in STEM departments.
5. The
need to understand the STEM teaching/mentoring and student learning
interactions during the high school years.
Since
having high-intensity and high-quality advanced mathematics and science
instruction is a key factor to successful completion of a bachelor's
degree, STEM teaching/mentoring and student learning interactions must
be studied and understood. We need to determine if and how STEM teaching/mentoring
and student learning interactions vary with different groups of students.
Also, we need to better understand the impact on students of having
mathematics and science teachers with strong content backgrounds.
It
is most important to understand the impact of high school science and
mathematics teachers on African American, Hispanic American, and Native
American students, including high-ability students and those in low-performing
schools.
6. The
need to monitor college and university STEM pre-service teacher preparation
programs for production of teachers who are effective with students
from all racial/ethnic and socioeconomic groups.
Pre-service
teacher education represents a set of institutional and classroom practices
that have intergenerational effects on students of all race/ethnic and
socioeconomic groups. We must document which institutions are producing
teachers of all race/ethnic groups that are culturally and habitually
effective in teaching STEM courses and with getting URM into STEM majors
and careers.
7. The
need to understand the decisions of URM to pursue doctoral work in STEM
and how to best influence these decisions.
We
know very little about why URM with doctoral degrees in STEM decided
to pursue Ph.Ds. We need to understand what roles parents or family,
as well as K-12 and college and university educators and peers, play
in their career choice, if any. Also, it is important to determine what
makes different STEM disciplines interesting to URM. In addition, we
need to better understand the role of industries on influencing doctoral
career paths for URM in STEM.
Tables 1 through 4 follow.
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End Notes
1 Day,
J. (1996). Population projections of the United States by age, sex,
race and Hispanic origin: 1995 to 2050. Arlington, VA: U.S. Census
Bureau.
2 U.S.
Office of Science and Technology Policy. National Science and Technology
Council. (2000). Ensuring a strong U.S. scientific, technical, and
engineering workforce in the 21st century. Washington, DC.
Women,
minorities, and persons with disabilities in science and engineering.
(2000). Arlington, VA: National Science Foundation.
3 Commission
on the Advancement of Women and Minorities in Science, Engineering
and Technology Development. (2000). Land of plenty: Diversity as
America's competitive edge in science, engineering and technology.
Arlington, VA: National Science Foundation.
4 Day,
J. (1996). Population projections of the United States by age, sex,
race and Hispanic origin: 1995 to 2050. Arlington, VA: U.S. Census
Bureau.
5 Commission
on the Advancement of Women and Minorities in Science, Engineering
and Technology Development. (2000). Land of plenty: Diversity as
America's competitive edge in science, engineering and technology.
Arlington, VA: National Science Foundation.
6 Commission
on the Advancement of Women and Minorities in Science, Engineering
and Technology Development. (2000). Land of plenty: Diversity as
America's competitive edge in science, engineering and technology.
Arlington, VA: National Science Foundation.
7 Adelman,
Clifford. (1999). Answers in the tool box: Academic intensity, attendance
patterns, and bachelor's degree attainment. Washington, DC: U.S.
Department of Education, Office of Educational Research and Improvement.
8 Malcom,
Shirley M., George, Yolanda S., & Van Horne, Virginia V. (Eds.).
(1996). The effect of the changing policy climate on science, mathematics,
and engineering diversity. Washington, DC: American Association
for the Advancement of Science.
Commission
on the Advancement of Women and Minorities in Science, Engineering
and Technology Development. (2000). Land of plenty: Diversity
as America's competitive edge in science, engineering and technology.
Arlington, VA: National Science Foundation.
9 Adelman,
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