'Speaking Truth' Protects Underrepresented Minorities' Intellectual Performance and Safety in STEM

We offer and test a brief psychosocial intervention, Speaking Truth to EmPower (STEP), designed to protect underrepresented minorities' (URMs) intellectual performance and safety in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). STEP takes a 'knowledge as power' approach by: (a) p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Avi Ben-Zeev (Author), Yula Paluy (Author), Katlyn Milless (Author), Emily Goldstein (Author), Lyndsey Wallace (Author), Leticia Marquez-Magana (Author), Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo (Author), Mica Estrada (Author)
Format: Book
Published: MDPI AG, 2017-06-01T00:00:00Z.
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Summary:We offer and test a brief psychosocial intervention, Speaking Truth to EmPower (STEP), designed to protect underrepresented minorities' (URMs) intellectual performance and safety in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). STEP takes a 'knowledge as power' approach by: (a) providing a tutorial on stereotype threat (i.e., a social contextual phenomenon, implicated in underperformance and early exit) and (b) encouraging URMs to use lived experiences for generating be-prepared coping strategies. Participants were 670 STEM undergraduates [URMs (Black/African American and Latina/o) and non-URMs (White/European American and Asian/Asian American)]. STEP protected URMs' abstract reasoning and class grades (adjusted for grade point average [GPA]) as well as decreased URMs' worries about confirming ethnic/racial stereotypes. STEP's two-pronged approach-explicating the effects of structural 'isms' while harnessing URMs' existing assets-shows promise in increasing diversification and equity in STEM.
Item Description:2227-7102
10.3390/educsci7020065