社会资本在引导黑人女孩计算机教育生态系统中的重要作用

IF 3.2 3区 工程技术 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES ACM Transactions on Computing Education Pub Date : 2023-11-30 DOI:10.1145/3632295
Camille Ferguson, Vanora Thomas, Juan Del Toro, Daniel Light, Kamau Bobb, Peta-Gay Clarke, Shameeka Emanuel, Ed Gronke, Mary Jo Madda, Imani Jennings
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在STEM领域,尤其是科技领域,黑人女性的代表性最为不足。根据The Verge网站2015年的一篇文章,在美国最大的八家科技公司中,黑人女性占员工总数的0%至7%[1]。这指出了科技行业在公平和包容性方面的一个明显问题。与她们在STEM领域的代表性不足类似,黑人女性在科技领域的代表性不足与美国普遍存在的、持续存在的偏见和偏见政策有关,这些偏见和政策限制了——并将继续限制——她们获得优质教育的机会,以及黑人女性文化资本(即存在方式)得到承认和欣赏的空间。对于包括黑人女性在内的大多数人来说,社交网络通常为实现她们在世界或特定行业中可以扮演的角色提供机会和途径[2][3]。这些关系网络及其嵌入的质量可以被定义为个人的社会资本,并适用于任何行业,包括STEM和技术领域[4]。从实际意义上讲,社会资本允许个人利用关系来获取资源(比如关于实习和工作的信息,或者鼓励坚持完成一门困难的大学课程)。反过来,这些资源可以为经济机会(即工作)或社会机会做出贡献,例如与在STEM领域工作的看门人建立关系,可能会带来工作,项目或财务支持等机会。研究表明,黑人年轻女性的社交网络很少与以白人和亚洲男性为主的社交网络重叠,而白人和亚洲男性在科技领域的比例过高。这削弱了黑人女性对机会和培训的意识,削弱了她们在STEM领域坚持的动力[5][6]。由于对社会资本在职业发展中的作用的理解日益加深,专注于STEM领域公平的K-12和高等教育项目越来越多地转向社会资本的概念,以解决某些群体——特别是黑人、拉丁裔和女性在STEM领域的代表性不足问题[4][5][6][7][8]。下面的研究调查了参加一个项目的黑人女孩的经历,谷歌的Code Next,旨在吸引黑人和拉丁裔青年参与计算机科学(CS)。我们认为,CS项目不仅要教授硬编码技能,而且要建立在年轻黑人女性的社会资本基础上,以适应年轻女性创造和扩大她们的技术社会资本,使她们能够成功地驾驭STEM和技术教育以及职业道路。具体来说,本文探讨了Code Next的子项目,以及它如何促进年轻黑人女性坚持STEM,特别是在技术领域。研究结果表明,年轻女性除了扩大文化资本(即语言、技能、存在方式)和世界观(即归属感和自我效能感)外,还运用了扩大的社会资本感来理解她们在技术世界中可能的自我。
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The Important Role Social Capital Plays in Navigating the Computing Education Ecosystem for Black Girls

Black women represent the greatest underrepresentation in STEM fields—and in particular, the technology sector. According to a 2015 article in The Verge, Black women make up between 0 to 7% of the staff at the eight largest technology firms in the United States [1]. This points to a glaring problem in terms of equity and inclusivity in the technology sector. Similar to their underrepresentation in the STEM sector, Black women's underrepresentation in the tech sector is related to pervasive and persistent prejudice and biased policies that endure in the U.S. which have limited—and continue to limit—their access to quality education and spaces where Black women's cultural capital (i.e., ways of being) is acknowledged and appreciated. For most people, including Black women, social networks often make available opportunities and pathways towards realizing the roles they can play in the world or a particular industry [2][3]. These webs of relationships and the embedded quality in them can be defined as an individual's social capital and be applied to any industry, including STEM and technology fields [4]. In a practical sense, social capital allows an individual to leverage relationships for resources (such as information about internships and jobs or encouragement to persist through a difficult college course). In turn, these resources can contribute to economic opportunities (i.e., jobs) or social opportunities, such as relationships with gatekeepers who work in STEM fields that may lead to opportunities like jobs, projects, or financial backing.

Research suggests that the social networks of Black young women rarely overlap with the networks of predominantly white and Asian males, who are overrepresented in the technology field. This weakens Black women's awareness of opportunities and training, and undermines their motivation to persist in the STEM sector [5][6]. As a result of this increasing understanding of the role of social capital in career development, K–12 and higher education programs that are focused on equity in STEM fields have increasingly turned to the concept of social capital to address the traditional underrepresentation of certain groups—in particular, Blacks, Latinos, and women in STEM fields [4][5][6][7][8]. The following research investigates the experiences of Black girls who attended a program, Google's Code Next, designed to engage Black and Latinx youth in computer science (CS). We argue that it is crucial for CS programs not just to teach hard coding skills, but also to build on young Black women's social capital to accommodate the young women in creating and expanding their tech social capital, enabling them to successfully navigate STEM and technology education and career pathways. Specifically, this paper explores a sub-program of Code Next and how it has contributed to young Black women's persistence in STEM, and particularly in technology. The findings suggest that the young women employed an expanded sense of social capital in addition to an expanded cultural capital (i.e., language, skills, ways of being) and worldview (i.e., sense of belonging and self-efficacy) to make sense of their possible selves in the world of technology.

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来源期刊
ACM Transactions on Computing Education
ACM Transactions on Computing Education EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES-
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
16.70%
发文量
66
期刊介绍: ACM Transactions on Computing Education (TOCE) (formerly named JERIC, Journal on Educational Resources in Computing) covers diverse aspects of computing education: traditional computer science, computer engineering, information technology, and informatics; emerging aspects of computing; and applications of computing to other disciplines. The common characteristics shared by these papers are a scholarly approach to teaching and learning, a broad appeal to educational practitioners, and a clear connection to student learning.
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