Sloan Project for Diversity in STEM Retention

Background

Within science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields, racial/ethnic minority men and women tend to differ by the STEM majors in which they persist to degree attainment. For instance, a greater share of STEM bachelor's degrees conferred in 2000-2001 went to racial/ethnic minority women than to their male counterparts in the following fields: agriculture and natural resources, biological sciences/life sciences, mathematics, and physical sciences and science technologies. This trend was not found in engineering or computer and information sciences (Digest of Education Statistics, 2003). Despite observed variations in retention and degree attainment within STEM majors by racial/ethnic group, gender, and STEM field, most retention programs for these students fail to account for and address within- group variances in their STEM experience (cf. Brown, 2002). Further, many extant STEM retention programs targeting racial/ethnic minorities may focus on factors, like provision of role models and increased number of science and math courses, for which there is no empirical support that they actually contribute to underrepresentation in the major (Lewis, 2003). There is a clear need for detailed consideration of racial/ethnic minorities' higher education experience within and across these groups (by race, by gender, by STEM major).

Learn more about the SLOAN project from this article in the Capital Times: Minorities Need Aid to Stay in Science (PDF)