高中stem职业课程与大学就业一致吗?

IF 1.3 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Teachers College Record Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.1177/01614681231175199
Michael Gottfried, Jennifer A. Freeman, Taylor K. Odle, J. Plasman, Daniel Klasik, Shaun M. Dougherty
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景/背景:科学、技术、工程、数学和医疗/健康(STEMM)领域的职业和技术教育(CTE)课程得到了政策制定者的支持,作为将中学到中学后教育与职业管道相结合的一种方式。然而,在这项研究中,人们关注的焦点是高中STEMM-CTE课程的学习是否预测了大学的发展,或者它是否预测了非大学学生的就业。很少有人关注高中STEMM CTE课程是否与大学就业机会一致。目的/目的/研究问题/研究重点:本研究调查了一种有前途的教育实践——STEMM职业与技术教育(STEMM-CTE)课程——与学生大学就业道路上的结果之间的关系。具体而言,我们提出了以下研究问题:在高中学习更多STEMM CTE课程是否与“一般”大学就业结果有关?在高中学习更多STEMM CTE课程是否与“STEMM特定”的大学就业结果有关?这些关系在重要的学生亚群中有何差异,即国家科学基金会认定的STEMM领域传统上代表性不足的学生亚群体:低收入学生、学习障碍学生、女性以及黑人和西班牙裔学生?研究设计:我们依赖于2009年高中纵向研究(HSLS)的数据。HSLS由美国国家教育统计中心(NCES)管理,是最新的、具有全国代表性的数据集,它跟踪了美国各地20000多名九年级学生在高中和毕业后的情况。我们的回归分析依赖于基线年学校水平调查(2009年)、高中成绩单更新(2013年)和学生水平调查期间从所有四个数据收集波(2009年、2012年、2013年、2016年)收集的数据。结论/建议:使用这些国家数据,我们发现,参加更多的STEMM CTE课程与在大学期间获得STEMM工作的机会更高以及对未来STEMM就业的期望更高有关,尽管与工资等一般就业结果无关。来自STEMM领域一些代表性不足背景的学生的研究结果有所不同,并对其影响进行了讨论。
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Does High School STEMM Career Coursework Align With College Employment?
Background/Context: Career and technical education (CTE) coursework in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and medical/health (STEMM) fields has been supported by policy makers as a way to align the secondary-to-postsecondary-to-career pipeline. Yet, in the research, the focus has been on whether STEMM CTE coursetaking in high school predicts college-going or whether it predicts employment for non–college goers. Little attention has been paid to whether STEMM CTE coursetaking in high school aligns with college employment opportunities. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study: This study investigates the relationship between one promising educational practice—STEMM career and technical education (STEMM CTE) coursetaking—and outcomes along students’ college employment pathways. Specifically, we asked the following research questions: Does taking more STEMM CTE courses in high school link to “general” college employment outcomes? Does taking more STEMM CTE courses in high school link to “STEMM-specific” college employment outcomes? How do these relationships vary across important student subgroups, namely, those identified by the National Science Foundation as traditionally underrepresented in STEMM fields: low-income students, students with learning disabilities, women, and Black and Hispanic students? Research Design: We relied on data from the High School Longitudinal Study of 2009 (HSLS). Administered by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), HSLS is the most current, nationally representative data set that follows a cohort of more than 20,000 ninth-grade students across the United States throughout high school and after graduation. Our regression analyses relied on data collected during the baseline year school-level survey (2009), the high school transcript update (2013), and student-level surveys from all four data-collection waves (2009, 2012, 2013, 2016). Conclusions/Recommendations: Using these national data, we find that taking more STEMM CTE courses was associated with a higher chance of having a STEMM job during college and having higher expectations for future STEMM employment, though not with general employment outcomes such as wages. The findings were different for students from some underrepresented backgrounds in STEMM fields, and implications are discussed.
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来源期刊
Teachers College Record
Teachers College Record EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.20
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0.00%
发文量
89
期刊介绍: Teachers College Record (TCR) publishes the very best scholarship in all areas of the field of education. Major articles include research, analysis, and commentary covering the full range of contemporary issues in education, education policy, and the history of education. The book section contains essay reviews of new books in a specific area as well as reviews of individual books. TCR takes a deliberately expansive view of education to keep readers informed of the study of education worldwide, both inside and outside of the classroom and across the lifespan.
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