Factors Associated with STEM Career Expectations of Greek 15-Year-Old Students
-
Published:2024-06-17
Issue:
Volume:
Page:
-
ISSN:2520-8705
-
Container-title:Journal for STEM Education Research
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Journal for STEM Educ Res
Author:
Pagkratidou MariannaORCID, Michaelides Michalis P.ORCID, Pitsia VasilikiORCID, Karakolidis AnastasiosORCID
Abstract
AbstractScience, technology engineering, and mathematics (STEM) professions offer competitive earnings, tend to be compatible with technological advances, and are predicted to remain in high demand in the future. Many countries, including Greece, have prioritised STEM education on their educational agendas, aiming to prepare students for careers in these fields. In this study, we investigated factors that may predict Greek students’ STEM career expectations through analysing data from the 2015 cycle of the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA). In doing so, we categorised the responses of 4910 15-year-old students to the question “What kind of job do you expect to have when you are about 30 years old?” into STEM and non-STEM professions, following a wide approach that included health and medical professions in the STEM category and a narrow approach that excluded these professions from the STEM category. Binary logistic regression results showed that student enjoyment of science, instrumental motivation, interest towards broad science topics, and their science performance were associated with their career expectations across both approaches; family economic, social, and cultural status was associated with students’ career expectations within the wide approach only, while gender and achievement motivation were associated with students’ career expectations within the narrow approach only. The differences in the factors predicting students’ career expectations between the two approaches indicate that transparency in the definitions and operationalisations of STEM is needed within the relevant research.
Funder
HORIZON EUROPE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference73 articles.
1. Adams, J., Avraamidou, L., Bayram-Jacobs, D., Boujaoude, S. B., Bryan, L., Christodoulou, A., Couso, D., Danielsson, A. T., Dillon, J., Evagorou, M., Goedhart, M., Kang, N.-H., Kaya, E., Kayumova, S., Larsson, J., Martin, S. N., Martinez-Chico, M., Marzàbal, A., Savelsbergh, E. R., ... Zembal-Saul, C. (2018). The role of science education in a changing world. Nias Lorentz Center. 2. Akerson, V. L., Burgess, A., Gerber, A., Guo, M., Khan, T. A., & Newman, S. (2018). Disentangling the meaning of STEM: Implications for science education and science teacher education. Journal of Science Teacher Education, 29(1), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1080/1046560X.2018.1435063 3. Anwar, S., Bascou, N. A., Menekse, M., & Kardgar, A. (2019). A systematic review of studies on educational robotics. Journal of Pre-College Engineering Education Research (J-PEER), 9(2), 19–42. https://doi.org/10.7771/2157-9288.1223 4. Avraamidou, L. (2020). Science identity as a landscape of becoming: Rethinking recognition and emotions through an intersectionality lens. Cultural Studies of Science Education, 15(2), 323–345. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11422-019-09954-7 5. Barone, C., Schizzerotto, A., Assirelli, G., & Abbiati, G. (2019). Nudging gender desegregation: A field experiment on the causal effect of information barriers on gender inequalities in higher education. European Societies, 21(3), 356–377. https://doi.org/10.1080/14616696.2018.1442929
|
|