Children's and adolescents’ evaluations of wealth‐related STEM inequality

Author:

McGuire Luke1ORCID,Marlow Christina2,Hoffman Adam J.3,Joy Angelina2,Law Fidelia1ORCID,Hartstone‐Rose Adam2,Rutland Adam1,Winterbottom Mark4,Balkwill Frances5,Burns Karen P.6,Butler Laurence7,Fields Grace8,Mulvey Kelly Lynn2

Affiliation:

1. University of Exeter Exeter UK

2. North Carolina State University Raleigh USA

3. Cornell University Ithaca USA

4. University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

5. Centre of the Cell Queen Mary University of London London UK

6. Virginia Aquarium & Marine Science Center Gloucester Point USA

7. Birmingham Museums Trust Thinktank Science Museum Birmingham UK

8. Riverbanks Zoo & Garden Columbia USA

Abstract

AbstractThe fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) are rife with inequalities and under‐representation that have their roots in childhood. While researchers have focused on gender and race/ethnicity as two key dimensions of inequality, less attention has been paid to wealth. To this end, and drawing from the Social Reasoning Development approach, we examined children's and adolescents’ perceptions of STEM ability and access to opportunities as a function of wealth, as well as their desire to rectify such inequalities. Participants (n = 234: early childhood, n = 70, mean age = 6.33, SD = .79; middle childhood, n = 92, mean age = 8.90, SD = .83 and early adolescence, n = 62, mean age = 12.00; SD = 1.16) in the U.K. (64% White British) and U.S. (40% White/European American) read about two characters, one high‐wealth and one low‐wealth. In early childhood, participants reported that the high‐wealth character would have greater STEM ability and were just as likely to invite either character to take part in a STEM opportunity. By middle childhood, participants were more likely to report equal STEM abilities for both characters and to seek to rectify inequalities by inviting the low‐wealth character to take part in a STEM opportunity. However, older participants reported that peers would still prefer to invite the high‐wealth character. These findings also varied by ethnic group status, with minority status participants rectifying inequalities at a younger age than majority status participants. Together these findings document that children are aware of STEM inequalities based on wealth and, with age, will increasingly seek to rectify these inequalities.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Wellcome Trust

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Sociology and Political Science,Developmental and Educational Psychology

Reference53 articles.

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