‘Using my education to fight for my communities’: understanding how an equity-based STEM experience cultivated equity ethic and STEM identity development among women of colour in STEM

Author:

Yeldell Jasmyne1ORCID,Wilkins-Yel Kerrie2ORCID,Bharaj Pavneet Kaur3ORCID,Francis Dionne Cross4ORCID,Mahmud Anina1,Walters Raven5ORCID,Bryson Tasia6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. PhD student, School of Education, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA

2. Assistant Professor, Counselling and School Psychology Program, College of Education and Human Development, University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA

3. Assistant Professor of Teacher Education, California State University, Long Beach, USA

4. Joseph R. Neikirk Term Professor, and Program Coordinator of Culture, Curriculum, and Teacher Education (CCTE), School of Education, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA

5. Master’s student, Gillings School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA

6. American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Fellow, Department of Energy, Washington, DC, USA

Abstract

The pervasive myth that science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) are purely objective subjects fosters significant disconnects between Black, Latinx, Asian, Brown and Indigenous students and K–12 STEM education, as the curriculum is often detached from their lived experiences. This disconnect leaves many students of colour feeling alienated in undergraduate and graduate STEM classrooms. Traditional STEM programmes rarely incorporate culturally responsive curricula that would allow students to connect more deeply with the content and develop their STEM identities. According to Carlone and Johnson’s framework of STEM identity development, students must view themselves as ‘doers’ of STEM. Without experiences that allow under-represented students to demonstrate competence and engage in disciplinary performance, their STEM identities are hindered. The I CAN PERSIST Initiative, a culturally responsive, evidence-based programme, aims to advance academic and career persistence among women and girls of colour in STEM. It seeks to reshape narratives about who can participate meaningfully in STEM through a curriculum designed to enhance students’ STEM identity development. This programme provides Black and Brown women and girls with opportunities to become ‘doers’ of STEM while integrating their lived experiences. Specifically, Black and Brown undergraduates and graduates facilitate lessons with local secondary school girls of colour interested in STEM, focusing on socio-scientific issues from a critical perspective. This article details the engagement of undergraduate and graduate women of colour in the I CAN PERSIST STEM Initiative through equity-based outreach activities that support their STEM identity development.

Publisher

UCL Press

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