Pathways of interest and participation: How STEM-interested youth navigate a learning ecosystem
Pathways of interest and participation: How STEM-interested youth navigate a learning ecosystem
Despite considerable efforts in recent years to encourage Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) interest and participation among youth, STEM interest during adolescence continues to decline. Recently, researchers, educators, and policymakers have used a learning ecology perspective to better understand the development and persistence of youth interest in STEM topics or activities. This study examined the dynamics of the STEM interest and participation pathways of three youth in an under-resourced, urban community. These three cases offer insights into how youth with a strong interest in a STEM topic or activity perceived the resources that were available to them in a STEM learning ecosystem and highlight the affordances and constraints each faced in pursuit of their interests. We interviewed each youth 4–5 times during their middle school and high school years (ages 11–14). The analysis reinforces the unique nature of youth interest pathways, but also common factors that contributed to each of these pathways. The ability of youth to navigate the ecosystem depended on the availability and accessibility of both in- and out-of-school learning resources related to their interest, and the support they received from significant adults in their lives in terms of both social, cultural, and financial capital. This study offers important insights into how STEM learning ecosystems might best be structured to enable more youth to develop strong, enduring interests in STEM.
STEM interest, STEM learning pathways, STEM participation, case studies, learning ecology, learning ecosystem
628-652
Shaby, Neta
8e27d9f4-f99e-4fae-8f5a-bfb59b67f0e5
Staus, Nancy
75c52699-09d5-481a-923e-6099eda58344
Dierking, Lynn
99c2449f-3aee-4990-b75c-fbbe7d6916e8
Falk, John
18fa9a02-5b4a-44b9-af97-58073e2248ff
July 2021
Shaby, Neta
8e27d9f4-f99e-4fae-8f5a-bfb59b67f0e5
Staus, Nancy
75c52699-09d5-481a-923e-6099eda58344
Dierking, Lynn
99c2449f-3aee-4990-b75c-fbbe7d6916e8
Falk, John
18fa9a02-5b4a-44b9-af97-58073e2248ff
Shaby, Neta, Staus, Nancy, Dierking, Lynn and Falk, John
(2021)
Pathways of interest and participation: How STEM-interested youth navigate a learning ecosystem.
Science Education, 105 (4), .
(doi:10.1002/sce.21621).
Abstract
Despite considerable efforts in recent years to encourage Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) interest and participation among youth, STEM interest during adolescence continues to decline. Recently, researchers, educators, and policymakers have used a learning ecology perspective to better understand the development and persistence of youth interest in STEM topics or activities. This study examined the dynamics of the STEM interest and participation pathways of three youth in an under-resourced, urban community. These three cases offer insights into how youth with a strong interest in a STEM topic or activity perceived the resources that were available to them in a STEM learning ecosystem and highlight the affordances and constraints each faced in pursuit of their interests. We interviewed each youth 4–5 times during their middle school and high school years (ages 11–14). The analysis reinforces the unique nature of youth interest pathways, but also common factors that contributed to each of these pathways. The ability of youth to navigate the ecosystem depended on the availability and accessibility of both in- and out-of-school learning resources related to their interest, and the support they received from significant adults in their lives in terms of both social, cultural, and financial capital. This study offers important insights into how STEM learning ecosystems might best be structured to enable more youth to develop strong, enduring interests in STEM.
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Accepted/In Press date: 16 April 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 May 2021
Published date: July 2021
Keywords:
STEM interest, STEM learning pathways, STEM participation, case studies, learning ecology, learning ecosystem
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 451586
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/451586
ISSN: 0036-8326
PURE UUID: 832086cd-8474-49d4-b61e-26bb90f0dcf4
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Date deposited: 12 Oct 2021 16:33
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:08
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Author:
Nancy Staus
Author:
Lynn Dierking
Author:
John Falk
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