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Ingroup role models and underrepresented students’ performance and interest in STEM: A meta-analysis of lab and field studies
by
Quinn, Diane M.
, Pan-Weisz, Bradley
, Camacho, Gabriel
, Lawner, Elizabeth K.
, Johnson, Blair T.
in
Academic Achievement
/ Advanced Courses
/ Alaska Natives
/ Child Role
/ College Science
/ College Students
/ Departments
/ Disproportionate Representation
/ Education
/ Effect Size
/ Electronic Mail
/ Engineering Technology
/ Ethnic Groups
/ Ethnicity
/ Females
/ Field Studies
/ Field study
/ Gender Differences
/ Influence of Technology
/ Interaction
/ Laboratories
/ Mathematics
/ Meta Analysis
/ Minority Groups
/ Personality and Social Psychology
/ Program Evaluation
/ Racial Differences
/ Review of the Literature
/ Role Models
/ Social Psychology
/ Sociology of Education
/ STEM Education
/ Stereotypes
/ Student Interests
/ Systematic review
2019
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Ingroup role models and underrepresented students’ performance and interest in STEM: A meta-analysis of lab and field studies
by
Quinn, Diane M.
, Pan-Weisz, Bradley
, Camacho, Gabriel
, Lawner, Elizabeth K.
, Johnson, Blair T.
in
Academic Achievement
/ Advanced Courses
/ Alaska Natives
/ Child Role
/ College Science
/ College Students
/ Departments
/ Disproportionate Representation
/ Education
/ Effect Size
/ Electronic Mail
/ Engineering Technology
/ Ethnic Groups
/ Ethnicity
/ Females
/ Field Studies
/ Field study
/ Gender Differences
/ Influence of Technology
/ Interaction
/ Laboratories
/ Mathematics
/ Meta Analysis
/ Minority Groups
/ Personality and Social Psychology
/ Program Evaluation
/ Racial Differences
/ Review of the Literature
/ Role Models
/ Social Psychology
/ Sociology of Education
/ STEM Education
/ Stereotypes
/ Student Interests
/ Systematic review
2019
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Ingroup role models and underrepresented students’ performance and interest in STEM: A meta-analysis of lab and field studies
by
Quinn, Diane M.
, Pan-Weisz, Bradley
, Camacho, Gabriel
, Lawner, Elizabeth K.
, Johnson, Blair T.
in
Academic Achievement
/ Advanced Courses
/ Alaska Natives
/ Child Role
/ College Science
/ College Students
/ Departments
/ Disproportionate Representation
/ Education
/ Effect Size
/ Electronic Mail
/ Engineering Technology
/ Ethnic Groups
/ Ethnicity
/ Females
/ Field Studies
/ Field study
/ Gender Differences
/ Influence of Technology
/ Interaction
/ Laboratories
/ Mathematics
/ Meta Analysis
/ Minority Groups
/ Personality and Social Psychology
/ Program Evaluation
/ Racial Differences
/ Review of the Literature
/ Role Models
/ Social Psychology
/ Sociology of Education
/ STEM Education
/ Stereotypes
/ Student Interests
/ Systematic review
2019
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Ingroup role models and underrepresented students’ performance and interest in STEM: A meta-analysis of lab and field studies
Journal Article
Ingroup role models and underrepresented students’ performance and interest in STEM: A meta-analysis of lab and field studies
2019
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Overview
This meta-analysis synthesizes research on using ingroup role models to improve the performance and interest of underrepresented students in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). A systematic literature search resulted in forty-five studies that met the selection criteria, including the presence of a comparison group. Both lab and field studies suffered from small sample bias, with smaller sample sizes predicting larger effect sizes among lab studies, but smaller effect sizes among field studies. Correcting for small sample bias, ingroup role models had a small, but significant positive overall effect (
d
= 0.20) among field studies and a non-significant overall effect (
d
= 0.04) among lab studies. The only significant moderator was level of interaction, with in-person role models having smaller effects among lab studies (
p
= .008). Implications for interventions to increase the representation of female and underrepresented minority students in STEM and future directions for research are discussed.
Publisher
Springer Netherlands,Springer,Springer Nature B.V
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