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2018 - The influence of parents on undergraduate and graduate students’ entering the STEM disciplines and STEM careers

Attribution: Craig, Cheryl J.; Verma, Rakesh; Stokes, Donna; Evans, Paige; Abrol, Bobby
Researchers: Bobby AbrolCheryl CraigDonna StokesPaige EvansRakes Vermah
University Affiliation: Texas A&M University
Email: cheryljcraig@gmail.com
Research Question:
The influence of parents on students’ studying the STEM disciplines and entering STEM careers.
Published: Yes
Journal Name or Institutional Affiliation: International Journal of Science Education
Journal Entry: Vol. 40:6, Pp. 621-643
Year: 2018
Findings:

– Nurtured by their mothers and/or fathers, students enter STEM disciplines and STEM-related careers through multiple pathways in addition to the anticipated pipeline.
– Incidents of circumstantial and planned parent curriculum making surfaced when the data was serially interpreted. What students know, how they are bent by their parents and others, and what they remember’ congealed and brought them to this point in their beginning STEM-related careers.

– Other themes that emerged included:
(1) Relationships between (student) learners and (teacher) parents: all three students eventually launched themselves into STEM careers, having experienced full-circle relationships between themselves as learners and a variety of ‘teachers (parents and teachers acting as teachers).’
(2) Invitations to inquiry: parents presented their children with confounding challenges that helped them to grow academically. Whether intentional or circumstantial, the students were provided with ‘invitations to inquiry.’
(3) Modes of inquiry: parents were not delivering ‘rhetoric of conclusions’ to their children. Instead, they were involving them in active learning and active testing of alternatives through informal project-based learning.
(4) The improbability of certainty: they were exposed to the idea that people will not know everything all the time and the acceptance that advances in scientific field do take place.
(5) Changed narratives=changed lives.

Scholarship Types: Journal Article Reporting Empirical ResearchKeywords: CareerCurriculumParental InvolvementSTEM EducationSTEM PipelineRegions: UnknownMethodologies: QualitativeResearch Designs: Case StudiesInterviews Sampling Frame:Two graduate students (one female, one male) and one undergraduate student (male)
Sampling Types: Non-Random - PurposiveAnalysis Units: StudentData Types: Qualitative-Cross Sectional
Data Description:

Three concepts underpin this narrative inquiry into parents’ shaping effects on their children’s STEM choices and career paths: experience, story, and identity.

The authors chose a sample of three students with contrasting academic trajectories.
1) Katrina (graduate student-teacher education program with a biology major) seamlessly finished high school, entered university, completed her programme of studies and became a teacher.
2) Ryan (graduate student-teacher education program with a physics major) completed high school, entered and left university, and returned almost two decades later.
3) Sam (undergraduate- computer science) obtained his general educational development (GED) certificate (an alternate way to finish high school), completed two years at a college, and then transferred his coursework to the research-intensive university.

Theoretical Framework:
Relevance:STEM Entrance and Majoring in STEM
Archives: K-16 STEM Abstracts
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