DocumentCode :
2156123
Title :
Strategies for overcoming barriers to women and minorities in STEM
Author :
Ilumoka, Abby
Author_Institution :
Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Hartford
fYear :
2012
fDate :
9-9 March 2012
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
4
Abstract :
Integration of STEM education into middle and high school curricula for women and minorities poses important challenges. First the average female or minority teenager is exposed to less than 3 hours/week of STEM-related material in popular media as compared to over 100 hours/week of non-STEM content such as sports, entertainment, music, movies, legal/medical TV soaps and dramas. As a result, STEM issues are barely on their radar screens. Second, STEM curricula in most middle and high schools is not always presented in the context of real world applications and everyday needs of society that would interest this population. Third, there are very few role models available. The STEM research effort reported here attempts to find ways to diversify the STEM workforce through identification of pedagogical strategies for recruitment and retention of women and minorities into STEM classrooms and ultimately into the STEM workforce.
Keywords :
educational institutions; gender issues; recruitment; STEM education; female; high school curricula; middle school curricula; minority teenager; pedagogical strategy; recruitment; women; Best practices; Conferences; Educational institutions; Materials; Recruitment; Robots; STEM; education; gender and racial bias; science self-efficacy;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Integrated STEM Education Conference (ISEC), 2012 IEEE 2nd
Conference_Location :
Ewing, NJ
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1097-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ISECon.2012.6204171
Filename :
6204171
Link To Document :
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