Perceptions of Skills Needed for STEM Jobs: Links to Academic Self-Concepts, Job Interests, Job Gender Stereotypes, and Spatial Ability in Young Adults.

IF 2.8 3区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Journal of Intelligence Pub Date : 2024-06-27 DOI:10.3390/jintelligence12070063
Margaret L Signorella, Lynn S Liben
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Abstract

Gender gaps in spatial skills-a domain relevant to STEM jobs-have been hypothesized to contribute to women's underrepresentation in STEM fields. To study emerging adults' beliefs about skill sets and jobs, we asked college students (N = 300) about the relevance of spatial, mathematical, science and verbal skills for each of 82 jobs. Analyses of responses revealed four job clusters-quantitative, basic & applied science, spatial, and verbal. Students' ratings of individual jobs and job clusters were similar to judgments of professional job analysts (O*NET). Both groups connected STEM jobs to science, math, and spatial skills. To investigate whether students' interests in STEM and other jobs are related to their own self-concepts, beliefs about jobs, and spatial performance, we asked students in another sample (N = 292) to rate their self-concepts in various academic domains, rate personal interest in each of the 82 jobs, judge cultural gender stereotypes of those jobs, and complete a spatial task. Consistent with prior research, jobs judged to draw on math, science, or spatial skills were rated as more strongly culturally stereotyped for men than women; jobs judged to draw on verbal skills were more strongly culturally stereotyped for women than men. Structural equation modeling showed that for both women and men, spatial task scores directly (and indirectly through spatial self-concept) related to greater interest in the job cluster closest to the one O*NET labeled "STEM". Findings suggest that pre-college interventions that improve spatial skills might be effective for increasing spatial self-concepts and the pursuit of STEM careers among students from traditionally under-represented groups, including women.

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对 STEM 工作所需技能的看法:青少年的学术自我概念、工作兴趣、工作性别成见和空间能力之间的联系。
空间技能--与 STEM 工作相关的技能--被认为是导致女性在 STEM 领域代表性不足的原因。为了研究新兴成人对技能组合和工作的看法,我们询问了大学生(300 人)空间、数学、科学和语言技能与 82 种工作的相关性。对回答的分析表明,有四类工作--定量、基础和应用科学、空间和语言。学生对单个职位和职位群的评价与专业职位分析师(O*NET)的判断相似。两组学生都将 STEM 工作与科学、数学和空间技能联系起来。为了调查学生对 STEM 和其他工作的兴趣是否与他们的自我概念、对工作的信念和空间表现有关,我们要求另一个样本(N = 292)中的学生对他们在各个学术领域的自我概念进行评分,对 82 种工作中的每一种工作进行个人兴趣评分,对这些工作的文化性别刻板印象进行判断,并完成一项空间任务。与之前的研究结果一致,男性比女性更容易对那些被判定为需要数学、科学或空间技能的工作产生文化定型观念;而女性比男性更容易对那些被判定为需要语言技能的工作产生文化定型观念。结构方程建模显示,对于女性和男性而言,空间任务得分直接(或通过空间自我概念间接)与对最接近 O*NET 标为 "STEM "的工作集群的更大兴趣相关。研究结果表明,提高空间技能的大学前干预措施可能会有效提高空间自我概念,并促进包括女性在内的传统上代表人数不足的群体的学生对 STEM 职业的追求。
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来源期刊
Journal of Intelligence
Journal of Intelligence Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
17.10%
发文量
0
审稿时长
11 weeks
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