Changing Social Contexts to Foster Equity in College Science Courses: An Ecological-Belonging Intervention

Author:

Binning Kevin R.12ORCID,Kaufmann Nancy3,McGreevy Erica M.3,Fotuhi Omid1,Chen Susie2,Marshman Emily4,Kalender Z. Yasemin5,Limeri Lisa6,Betancur Laura2ORCID,Singh Chandralekha7

Affiliation:

1. Learning Research and Development Center, University of Pittsburgh

2. Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh

3. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh

4. Department of Physics, Community College of Allegheny County

5. Department of Physics, Cornell University

6. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Georgia

7. Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pittsburgh

Abstract

In diverse classrooms, stereotypes are often “in the air,” which can interfere with learning and performance among stigmatized students. Two studies designed to foster equity in college science classrooms ( Ns = 1,215 and 607) tested an intervention to establish social norms that make stereotypes irrelevant in the classroom. At the beginning of the term, classrooms assigned to an ecological-belonging intervention engaged in discussion with peers around the message that social and academic adversity is normative and that students generally overcome such adversity. Compared with business-as-usual controls, intervention students had higher attendance, course grades, and 1-year college persistence. The intervention was especially impactful among historically underperforming students, as it improved course grades for ethnic minorities in introductory biology and for women in introductory physics. Regardless of demographics, attendance in the intervention classroom predicted higher cumulative grade point averages 2 to 4 years later. The results illustrate the viability of an ecological approach to fostering equity and unlocking student potential.

Funder

Division of Undergraduate Education

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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