NSF Awards: 1513060
2018 (see original presentation & discussion)
Grades 9-12
SciGirls, a national PBS multimedia project produced by Twin Cities PBS, recently released a series of short videos called SciGirls Snapshots. These videos are part of SciGirls Strategies, a multi-year NSF initiative that provides Minnesota’s career and technical education (CTE) high school educators and counselors with gender equitable and culturally responsive teaching approaches.
Over the past three years, SciGirls Strategies have developed a semester-long course and year-long interaction. We have provided the face-to-face course for all three years, and this year have added an online version to engage teachers in greater Minnesota.
Like all of SciGirls media content and educators’ resources, the SciGirls Snapshot project component is rooted in the SciGirls Seven, a set of research-based strategies to engage girls in STEM studies and career paths. Our NSF Showcase submission is titled “Explicit Gender Equity,” and discusses best practices for introducing girls to obstacles they may face in pursuing non-traditionally female technical and trades occupations.
Additional SciGirls Snapshots videos focus on:
These videos will be disseminated by our national partners PBS Learning Media and the National Girls Collaborative, reaching thousands more educators, and will be shared with our 85 certified SciGirls CONNECT trainers who annually train hundreds of educators.
Fun fact: the featured instructor, Dr. Barbara Billington, worked on the original SciGirls Seven strategies as a post-doc at the University of Minnesota, and is now a teaching professor at their STEM Center.
Leah Defenbaugh
SciGirls Outreach Manager
Welcome to our page! We're excited to share the resources of Dr. Barb Billington, a expert in gender equity in STEM. I'm excited to talk with you!
Barbara Berns
Education Planner
There were several points that jumped out at me from this video. 1) There are, in fact, a set of 7 research-based strategies to engage girls in STEM studies and career paths. That means there is a starting point for those who want to work in this area but don't have the resources for new research. 2) Girls are going into more STEM careers than ever before, but NOT in the areas with the most growth. 3) There are no major differences in the abilities of boys and girls; it is primarily an issue of motivation, attitude and confidence, and the "experts" believe we can change these gaps! 4) The SCI Girls project can suggest "easy and good" things - a lot of little things - we can do to bring more girls into science and CTE.
To know if districts and schools could adapt the projects' strategies and approaches, one would have to view previous videos and look into the results of the 3 year course history. Glad to see there is now an online course for educators; is this open to those outside of Minnesota?
My one concern - and one that is always difficult to address - is whether many of the "little changes" will be effective IF there are no changes in the institutional and infrastructure issues in public education.
Leah Defenbaugh
SciGirls Outreach Manager
Hello, Barbara!
You bring up some great points. This project encourages educators to make a series of small changes, reflecting along the way, which add up to a much larger difference over time.
At SciGirls, we are also concerned about institutional change, and are happy to have our content used by legislators and other stakeholders, but feel that our expertise and research are better suited for professional development on the educator and/or school district level. We hope that a both/and approach will lead to better student outcomes.
Rita Karl
Thank you Barbara! To see the entire collection of equity films, please visit our SciGirls CONNECT Educator's page which also has a direct link to the SciGirls Strategies as well as the accompanying SciGirls Snapshots.
The course is currently only open to educators and counselors in Minnesota and Wisconsin, but we are very interested in piloting it in other parts of the country through potentially a train-the-trainer model (similar to our SciGirls CONNECT model) for CTE and STEM leads in schools districts in other states.
Genie Matthews
A very impressive presentation. Well done! Our young girls need more dedicated people like you.
Auntie Genie
Leah Defenbaugh
SciGirls Outreach Manager
Thank you, Genie!
Courtney Tanenbaum
Principal Researcher
I loved how grounded this video and your work is grounded in the research and that you address the myriad (and very complex) factors that affect girls' academic and career choices and pathways in STEM. Have you encountered any challenges over the course of your project of getting counselors and teachers to face or acknowledge their own implicit biases? Also, similar to a comment by Barbara, have you found through your work that the broader school culture or way of doing things ahs changed by virtue of seeing the work being done in these classrooms and with these teachers?
Leah Defenbaugh
SciGirls Outreach Manager
Hello, Courtney!
Implicit bias is a challenging topic, and one that we do face head-on. We were fortunate enough to have three years of implementation in this project, and were able to be iterative in the way we discussed this bias. What we found most helpful, by the third year, was creating a cultural responsiveness rubric and requiring educators to grade themselves, then create an individualized plan, with help from project staff, to move forward in areas where they lack. We found that this gave educators concrete steps to take, and broke down these slightly nebulous concepts into smaller issues that educators could tackle.
Changes in school culture vary widely in this project. The best examples of school culture change have happened when both administration and school counselors have been willing and excited to work with educators in order to achieve these goals.
Courtney Tanenbaum
Principal Researcher
Also, I do have one more question—you mention that teachers have indicated that the strategies they are being trained in are relatively easy to make in the classroom. That being said, have you been able to measure the extent to which they are actually implementing these strategies in practice? In the moment of teaching? I know it can be hard to break pedagogical habits, even when intentions are good!
Leah Defenbaugh
SciGirls Outreach Manager
Our evaluator observes each educator, as well as interviewing them, in order to try to tease out the differences in teachers' intent vs. their actions. We have seen that educators have changed their practice, but, as you correctly point out, there are still lingering habits that our evaluator notices, and she will give feedback to the educator that addresses such.
Additionally, we are currently conducting research on student outcomes which we hope will better answer this question.
Kelly Riedinger
Senior Researcher
Thank you for sharing your video and Dr. Billington’s expertise on gender equity in STEM! Like Barbara, I appreciated the list of evidence-based strategies for engaging girls in STEM. Related to Courtney’s question, I am similarly curious about how teachers have implemented these strategies and how this plays out in the classroom and other science education settings. I am also interested in learning more about what changes have resulted for the girls. What kind of research/evaluation questions are you asking and what kind of evidence do you have from the girls that demonstrates the impact of these strategies? Thanks!
Leah Defenbaugh
SciGirls Outreach Manager
Hello, Kelly!
Teachers each implement the strategies different ways. They self-evaluate using a rubric created by the SciGirls curriculum team, and then work with SciGirls' staff implement changes.
We greatly appreciate the NSF for funding SciGirls for many years. This project is one of the few that targets formal educators, but we have many research and evaluation projects that study the efficacy of the SciGirls Seven in informal education environments. All of our STEM evaluations can be found here: http://www.scigirlsconnect.org/evaluations/
Thank you!
Rita Karl
The SciGirls Strategies research component consists of a quasi-experimental mixed methods study to contribute to improved programming and knowledge in the field, particularly concerning the innovative STEM role-modeling strategies employed in this project. The research study includes both a quantitative and qualitative component. For the quantitative component we have a series of validated instruments we are using to ask girls of the trained educators before the course begins and at the end of an entire year of implementation. We are comparing these findings to a comparison group of girls whose teachers have not taken the course. The qualitative component includes ten case studies of girls of educators who have implemented the strategies and uses interviews, journalling and student-created autobiographical video. This work is being led by Dr. Brad McLain, CU-Boulder.
The research component is testing the hypothesis, girls, currently underrepresented in computing and engineering pathways and workforce will develop a more positive STEM identity and interest in these careers when their educators are trained to employ research-based gender equitable teaching practices and female role models.
The researchers are investigating girls’ personal learning experiences engaging with the project strategies and deliverables and how those experiences contribute to their science (or STEM-related) identity development against cultural and gender-based stereotypes. Our research question is "To what extent do girls' experiences impact their self-concepts in terms of sense of agency and self-efficacy, science and STEM concepts, capacity for STEM learning, and future choice aspirations for technical education studies and related careers?"
We look forward to sharing our findings in the coming year!
Hannoori Jeong
Great presentation! I appreciate your work toward promoting gender equity in STEM field. I'm curious to know if you observe any differences in minority girls' attitude/self-efficacy beliefs and identity development in science in particular? how do you think SES and sociocultural influences affect girls' science learning and career aspirations?
Leah Defenbaugh
SciGirls Outreach Manager
Great questions! Though we do discuss cultural competency with the educators in this initiative, and several teachers focused their projects on cultural competence in their classrooms, our research doesn't specifically ask about race, ethnicity, or socioeconomic status.
However, we do have many initiatives around Latinas in STEM that show that representation and intentional intersectionality are essential when working with young people who are racial, ethnic, or SES minorities. I don't want to extrapolate to all groups, so I will stick to our Latinx evaluation. Middle school Latinas have a positive STEM identity development when in STEM groups that are Latina-focused, doing activities that are created with Latinx cultures in mind, using role models that are Latinas, and watching media that shows Latinas in STEM careers.
There are more and different barriers for Latinas vs. white female students when it comes to engaging with STEM classes and careers, and though our goal is to 'move the needle,' it is really a full community goal, with parents, schools, community partners, and more as stakeholders. We strive to make sure our programs involve the full community with family nights, role model visits, and educational partners that reflect a girl's full culture.
You can read more about these evaluations here: http://www.scigirlsconnect.org/evaluations/
Does this answer your question?
Jameela Jafri
I've always been a fan of SciGirls and its work towards gender equity in STEM. Have you observed any differences in how the strategies manifest in formal vs. out-of-school time STEM learning environments?
Leah Defenbaugh
SciGirls Outreach Manager
Hi, Jameela!
There are definitely differences. Formal educators are constrained by time, group size and composition, and curriculum/standards. Because of this, we encourage a sort of small, experimental approach to changing a teacher's practice. For example, a teacher may look at group work one week, and keep the assignment the same, but assign real-world roles to the group. A different week, the teacher may adjust the assignment to give the student more choice in how they complete the project, making it more open-ended.
Informal educators, on the other hand, have more flexibility in what activities they choose, and more student input in how they deliver programming. However, because of the large spectrum of different kinds of programming (summer camps, Boys and Girls clubs, etc), they may have struggles around role model visits, having the same youth visit every day (and being able to carry projects over day-to-day), and other things that make consistency in delivering strategies a struggle.
However, I would say that the strategies themselves are broad enough that they lend themselves to either environment. Educators just need to explore the needs of their institution, as well as their own teaching practice, and work from there to implement gender equity.
(And if they'd like a brainstroming partner in this endeavor, they are always free to email me at ldefenbaugh - at - tpt - dot - org)
Further posting is closed as the event has ended.