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STEM students’ self-perceptions of graduate employability: a gender, region, and gender-regional analysis in China

STEM students’ self-perceptions of graduate employability: a gender, region, and gender-regional analysis in China
STEM students’ self-perceptions of graduate employability: a gender, region, and gender-regional analysis in China
Drawing on the framework of social cognitive career theory (SCCT), this work aims to understand whether self-perceived employability (PE) beliefs of STEM undergraduates in China differ by gender, region (urban/rural, and geographical divide), and/or gender-regional intersectionality. 1,713 STEM undergraduates from multiple universities in China completed a self-reported questionnaire. Our findings showed that (i) gender impacts perceived employability (PE) such that men report higher PE than women; (ii) region impacts PE in such a way that urban regions report higher PE levels than their peers in rural regions; and (iii) intersectionality affects PE in such a way that women from rural regions report the lowest PE, then men from rural regions, then women from urban regions, with PE being highest for men from urban regions. This shows that the environmental element (region) has a stronger effect, subsequently weakening the influence of the personal element (gender) per intersectionality. The findings apply across three dimensions of PE: self-awareness (SPA), perceived program relevance (PPR), and career exploration and awareness (CEA). Theoretical contributions illuminate PE beliefs across gender, regional, and intersectional lines, pinpointing which PE belief dimensions need enhancement. Practical and policy implications suggest ways for individuals, higher education institutions, and society to address gender and regional inequalities, thereby bolstering STEM students' PE.
1598-1037
Ma, Yin
e1742de2-49eb-4ede-8523-b6ad54f46f51
Donald, William E.
0b3cb4ca-8ed9-4a5f-9c10-359923469eec
Wang, Ying
2c0b541c-d5ad-4366-96e4-e3e47ab26d18
Ma, Yin
e1742de2-49eb-4ede-8523-b6ad54f46f51
Donald, William E.
0b3cb4ca-8ed9-4a5f-9c10-359923469eec
Wang, Ying
2c0b541c-d5ad-4366-96e4-e3e47ab26d18

Ma, Yin, Donald, William E. and Wang, Ying (2024) STEM students’ self-perceptions of graduate employability: a gender, region, and gender-regional analysis in China. Asia Pacific Education Review. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Drawing on the framework of social cognitive career theory (SCCT), this work aims to understand whether self-perceived employability (PE) beliefs of STEM undergraduates in China differ by gender, region (urban/rural, and geographical divide), and/or gender-regional intersectionality. 1,713 STEM undergraduates from multiple universities in China completed a self-reported questionnaire. Our findings showed that (i) gender impacts perceived employability (PE) such that men report higher PE than women; (ii) region impacts PE in such a way that urban regions report higher PE levels than their peers in rural regions; and (iii) intersectionality affects PE in such a way that women from rural regions report the lowest PE, then men from rural regions, then women from urban regions, with PE being highest for men from urban regions. This shows that the environmental element (region) has a stronger effect, subsequently weakening the influence of the personal element (gender) per intersectionality. The findings apply across three dimensions of PE: self-awareness (SPA), perceived program relevance (PPR), and career exploration and awareness (CEA). Theoretical contributions illuminate PE beliefs across gender, regional, and intersectional lines, pinpointing which PE belief dimensions need enhancement. Practical and policy implications suggest ways for individuals, higher education institutions, and society to address gender and regional inequalities, thereby bolstering STEM students' PE.

Text
AAM Ma Donald Wang (2024) APER - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 8 August 2025.
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 August 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493369
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493369
ISSN: 1598-1037
PURE UUID: c479823e-5ccd-4060-a05c-8be17e5b014e
ORCID for William E. Donald: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3670-5374

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Date deposited: 30 Aug 2024 16:54
Last modified: 31 Aug 2024 02:11

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Contributors

Author: Yin Ma
Author: William E. Donald ORCID iD
Author: Ying Wang

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