Factors that encourage females to pursue physical science careers: Testing five common hypotheses

ORAL

Abstract

There are many hypotheses regarding factors that may encourage female students to pursue careers in the physical sciences. Using Propensity Score Matching (PSM) on national data (n=7505) drawn from the Persistence Research in Science and Engineering (PRiSE) project, we test five commonly held beliefs including having a single-sex physics class, having a female physics teacher, having female scientist guest speakers in physics class, discussing the work of women scientists in physics class, and discussing the under-representation of women in physics class. The effect of these experiences is compared for female students who are matched on several factors, including parental education, prior science/math interests, and academic background, thereby controlling for the effect of many confounding variables.

*NSF Career 0952460, GSE 0624444

Authors

  • Zahra Hazari

    • Department of Engineering \& Science Education and Department of Mathematical Sciences, Clemson University
  • Geoff Potvin

    • Department of Engineering \& Science Education and Department of Mathematical Sciences, Clemson University
  • Robynne M. Lock

    • Department of Engineering \& Science Education, Clemson University
  • Florin Lung

    • Department of Engineering \& Science Education, Clemson University
  • Philip M. Sadler

    • Science Education Department, Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
  • Gerhard Sonnert

    • Science Education Department, Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics