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E-grāmata: Empowering Underrepresented Students in Science: STEM Students Speak

(Medical Student, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA), (Professor, Department of Biology), (Director, UMass Amherst STEM Ambassadors Program, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA)
  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Sep-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Academic Press Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780323904704
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Sep-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Academic Press Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780323904704
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Empowering Underrepresented Students in Science: STEM Students Speak chronicles the best practices of a STEM retention program for underrepresented minority students (URM) at a public university. Written mostly as an engaging series of vignettes, this story invites its audience to examine the “underbelly of this successful program. It reveals to readers what lies at the heart of creating and sustaining a STEM retention program that is as inviting as it is vital. The program’s practice of reflection helps to build students’ self-efficacy and self-understanding. This book addresses the problem of merely throwing resources at a program to have it only achieve mild success.

Most STEM retention/support programs offer a litany of “things they think are necessary for students, especially traditionally underserved students, to survive in STEM. We contend that our program goes beyond merely throwing money at a need, to critically assessing the need through the lens of inclusive practices. Our program attempts to engage with the whole selves of the students we serve.

  • Proposes a focused, strategic approach to offering support to underrepresented minority (URM) students
  • Shares easily reproducible ways to build a STEM support program to replicate the success at UMASS AP
  • Features an engaging, readable style with real-world applications
Preface vii
Acknowledgments xi
About the Authors xiii
1 Who Needs stem support?
1(12)
Introduction
1(1)
The Value of the STEM Community
2(1)
The STEM Ambassadors Community
2(2)
The Power of Mentoring
4(1)
Building a STEM Identity Through Reflection
5(2)
Becoming a Scientist by Doing Science
7(2)
Bringing It All Together
9(2)
References
11(2)
2 Building a STEM identity
13(12)
Why a STEM Identity Matters
13(2)
Reflection, Reflection, and More Reflection
15(3)
Designing a Program to Foster Personal Growth
18(3)
A Surprising, Unexpected Benefit
21(1)
References
22(3)
3 The Power of Mentoring
25(20)
From the Very Beginning
25(1)
Why Does This Matter?
25(1)
Constructing a STEM Mentoring Network
26(2)
Graduate Student Mentors Share Their Wisdom and Experience
28(2)
Near-Peer Mentors Connect Most Closely With Their Mentees
30(9)
Middle School Mentoring: Empowering the Mentor
39(3)
The Transformative Power of Mentoring
42(1)
References
43(2)
4 Research Experience: A Nearly Perfect Predictor of STEM Student Success
45(18)
Engaging in Research
45(1)
It's a Numbers Game
46(1)
What Are CUREs, Anyway?
46(2)
Creating a CURE
48(5)
CUREs as a Solution
53(1)
Why Haven't CUREs Taken Off?
54(2)
Getting Into a Research Laboratory
56(2)
Summer Research Experiences
58(1)
References
59(4)
5 The Power of a Community to Transform STEM Students
63(18)
Monday Night Seminar
63(2)
We Must Be Deliberate
65(5)
The STEM AP Office
70(4)
STEM AP and COVID-19
74(2)
A Community Is a Community Is a Community
76(2)
The Future of the STEM AP Community
78(1)
References
79(2)
6 Our Students' Voices
81(14)
Our Alumni Speak
81(1)
Natalie
82(1)
Wei Li
83(2)
Lorenzo
85(2)
Santiago
87(1)
Amira
88(1)
Shontelle
89(1)
Wendy
90(1)
Alisha
91(1)
Navid
92(1)
Their Voices Matter
93(1)
References
94(1)
7 Creating Your Own STEM Support Systems
95(10)
Should You Create a STEM Support System at Your Institution?
95(1)
Appreciating the Importance of Creating a More Inclusive Classroom
96(1)
Taking the First Steps: Simple Ways to Create a More Inclusive STEM Classroom
97(2)
Organizing a Supportive Community
99(2)
The Top-Down Approach: The Role of Institutes of Higher Education
101(3)
So Many Moving Pieces
104(1)
References 105(4)
Index 109
Sonji Johnson-Anderson is the Director at the UMass Amherst STEM Ambassadors Program. Sonjis research interests sit at the intersection of Black Feminist Epistemology, Critical Race Theory and Performance Ethnography. Her work focuses on the experiences of students and families who are marginalized in public domains, primarily educational institutions. A gifted educator and public speaker, Sonji brings decades of teaching experience and a deep commitment to critical and culturally relevant pedagogy. Sonji has taught in K-12 classrooms, as well as higher education contexts in Western Massachusetts, New York City and Jamaica, and currently lectures in world literature at Westfield State University. Dr. Johnson-Anderson develops and teaches/facilitates courses, workshops, lectures, trainings, public events, and performances. Ranjana Lingutla is a medical student at the Tufts University School of Medicine. She earned her B.S. in Biochemistry & Molecular Biology from the University of Massachusetts Amherst. As a native of rural Western Massachusetts, she spent years serving and mentoring students from traditionally marginalized backgrounds. She mentored high school STEM students in Pittsfield Public Schools Science & Engineering Academy and mentored and advised STEM undergraduates in the Commonwealth Honors College Advising Center. Because of her passion for equal education and student welfare, Ranjana was recruited to Dr. Rileys STEM Ambassadors Program where she has since served as a Peer-Mentoring Instructor, Undergraduate Program Manager, and current Assistant Director. Margaret (Peg) Riley is a Professor in the Department of Biology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She received her Ph.D. from Harvard and served on the faculty at Yale until she moved to UMass in 2012. Pegs research focuses on the evolution of antibiotic resistance and the use of ecological approaches to drug discovery. She is one of the pioneers of narrow spectrum antimicrobials, which provide novel solutions to the global challenge of antibiotic resistance. Dr. Riley is also known for her efforts to increase civic science literacy leading to the creation of the Massachusetts Academy of Sciences in 2007. She has also appeared on several of Bill Nyes shows and podcasts. Most recently, she created the NSF grant-funded STEM Ambassadors Program, whose mission is to build a supportive and diverse community of STEM scholars at the college level. Her program has resulted in improved outcomes for over 250 students at UMass Amherst and she is now poised to bring this programs tenets to a wider audience of STEM faculty, university administrators, and leaders in STEM industries and funding agencies.