The Pre-Major in Astronomy Program (Pre-
MAP)
Daryl Haggard, University of WashingtonAAPT/AAS, Seattle, 2007
Increasing Underrepresented Student Participation in
Science Majors:
The number of science majors at U.S. undergraduate institutions is shrinking while much of the country's STEM workforce is approaching retirement.
The fraction of science Ph.D.s awarded to African American, Latino, and other minority students is far smaller than the fraction these minorities constitute of the general population.
Substantial gender imbalances in most science fields persist: women are underrepresented at the graduate student and faculty levels, and continue to be lost at every educational transition.
Members of underrepresented groups are America's ``greatest untapped resource'' in STEM.
A National Shortfall
Building Engineering & Science Talent Report (2004) & The National Science Board Report (2003)
Rising Above the Gathering Storm, National Academy of Sciences (2006)
Beyond Bias and Barriers, National Academy of Sciences (2006)
National Science Foundation, NSF 06-320 (2006)
Our future studentsBy 2010, women will earn more degrees than men at every level of higher education from associate degrees to doctorates.
By 2015, the nation’s undergraduate population will expand by over 2.6 million students, two million of whom will be students of color.
Almost half of this 2.6 million increase will occur in CA, TX, and FL, which also will have the highest representation of undergraduates of color. Much of the rest of the projected growth will be concentrated in AZ, GA, NJ, VI, and WA.
Even with these increases, Hispanic and African American students enrolled in post-secondary education in 2015 will greatly lag their respective shares of the U.S. population.
Building Engineering & Science Talent (BEST) Report, Feb. 2004
Meanwhile...Many students who enter college planning to major in a STEM discipline graduate with a non-STEM degree.
Only 27% of underrepresented students who intend to major in a STEM field obtain a STEM degree, compared to 46% of majority students with the same intent.
Many underrepresented students who abandon STEM majors have academic abilities at least as great as those who stay.
Large numbers of talented minority students in high school and early college are interested in STEM fields...
American Council on Education, Minorities in Higher Ed. (2002-03)
Huang, G., et al., Department of Education (2000)
Talking About Leaving, Seymour, E. & Hewitt, N. (1997)
FEW ARE RETAINED
There are some who believe that high attrition rates are due to inadequate preparation of college freshmen and that the onus lies with the K-12 system.
There are others who believe that if an entering student has the will and desire to be a scientist or engineer, the onus is on the institution to provide the resources for that student to try to achieve that goal. - Tuajuanda C. Jordan, HHMI
Building Engineering & Science Talent (BEST) Report, Feb. 2004
Advanced Degrees in Science and Engineering Total: 121,000
Bachelor’s Degrees in Science and Engineering Total: 391,000
First Time Freshmen Interested in Science and Engineering Total: 647,000
First Time Freshmen Total: 2,194,000
High School Graduates Total: 2,485,000
Non-Minority MenMinority Men
Minority Women Non-Minority Women
6%
37%
34%
41%
45%
56%
40%
31%
41%
37%
4%5%35%
9%
12%
10%
12% 14%
15%
16%
Milestones in Higher EducationEducation Milestones by Race/Ethnicity and
Gender (Rounded Numbers)
Key Factors for Student Retention
Effective Education & Curriculum
Knowledgeable Advising
Effective Mentoring
Access (to research, resources, facilities, etc.)
Having a Sense of Community
Academic Support
Financial Aid
Discipline-specific “Extracurricular” Activities
Tuajuanda C. Jordan, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington Symposium on Diversity in the Sciences (2006)
Can we replenish the pool of STEM professionals by removing the barriers that cause talented students from traditionally underrepresented groups to turn away from careers in a STEM field?
Our Challenge
A U.W. Case Study A U.W. Case Study
The Pre-Major in Astronomy Program (Pre-MAP)
Established in Fall 2005 with funding from the U.W. President’s Diversity Appraisal Fund & the Astronomy Dept.
Designed to expose incoming freshmen underrepresented in the sciences to Astronomy Research and encourage them toward a STEM major
Students underrepresented in the sciences include: women, African Americans, Latinos, Native Americans, Asian/Pacific Islanders, persons with disabilities, and economically disadvantaged students of all ethnicities whose parents do not have 4-year college degrees (i.e. first-generation college students).
Students Need…Problem-solving skills (critical-thinking & test-taking skills, ability to visualize in three dimensions)
Ability to connect coursework and real-world experiences (inquiry-based labs and research)
Enhanced interdisciplinary learning (research again!)
Writing skills (general & scientific vocabulary, ability to clearly articulate ideas)
Ability to form and work in study groups
Time management and organization
Metacognitive abilities (understanding how they learn best and monitoring their own learning)
Frequent meetings with academic advisor(s)
The Pre-MAP Model
The Pre-MAP research seminar
Astronomy 102: Intro to Astronomy
Access to astronomy research and collaboration with faculty, post-docs, fellows, and graduate students
Mentoring for the whole first year
Cohort-building (peer mentors)
Help identifying resources & opportunities at U.W.
Assistance navigating the U.W. bureaucracy
A successful first year in science!!
RecruitmentCollaborate with organizations designed to transition underrepresented students from high school to college (Upward Bound, Making Connections, etc.)
Work closely with counselors from the Office of Minority Affairs
Targeted emails and letters using the admissions office database and contact lists from on-campus recruiting organizations, e.g. NASA Space Grant
Attend numerous local recruiting and outreach events to present information about Pre-MAP
Host events at the U.W., including planetarium shows, job shadows, etc.
The Pre-MAP
Seminar Computing Skills (LINUX)
Basic Astronomy Data Manipulation (DS9, IDL)
Research Projects (Small Groups)
Writing Assignments
Exam Reviews
Campus Resources
Final Presentations!
Partnered with Astronomy 102
Research ProjectsDeconstructing Galaxies in 3 Dimensions,Advisors: Chris Brook, Victor Debattista, Fabio Governato, Tom Quinn
Hunting for New Supernovae and Other Variable Objects in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: Advisor: Andy Becker
M Dwarfs as Tracers of Galactic Populations,
Advisors: John Bochanski, Suzanne Hawley
Probing for the Presence of Puny Planets, Advisor: Eric Agol
Searching for Inner Solar System Objects with SDSS, Advisor: Andy Becker
MentoringEffective mentoring requires that an individual establishes a relationship with the “mentee” with the very basic, yet essential, understanding that the relationship is a humanistic experience and thus every experience will be different. The relationship includes:
Guidance
A certain amount of nurturing
Cultivation towards independence
Empowerment
Two typesPeer mentoring (freshmen “interest groups”, upper-level undergrads)
Faculty mentoringTuajuanda C. Jordan, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington Symposium on Diversity in the Sciences, 2006
“Returning to passion as the driver of learning, a teacher’s dedication is most effective when expressed through both the art of teaching and the demonstrated love of the subject for its own sake. Secondary school and college students seek their personal identity, but they also yearn for a cause larger than themselves. By some means they will acquire both these marks of maturity, whether base or noble. In transit they need mentors to trust, heros to emulate, and accomplishments that are real and enduring.”
- Edward O. Wilson, The Creation
Mentoring
Sense of CommunityStudent should feel, from the outset, they belong in your program and are in a welcoming and supportive environment.
Frequent and personal communications from the department faculty, students or staff as soon as the student is accepted into the University.
A positive group identification or trademark.
A readily identifiable and accessible gathering place that can also serve as a resource room (and KEYS!).Tuajuanda C. Jordan, Howard Hughes Medical
Institute, University of Washington Symposium on Diversity in the Sciences, 2006
Academic AdvisingAcademic advising can be done either individually or in teams, by faculty or staff.
The advising system should be consistent.
The advisor(s) must be available, accessible, and knowledgeable of the academic programs and career options.
Must be assigned as soon as the student declares his or her major.Tuajuanda C. Jordan, Howard Hughes Medical Institute,
University of Washington Symposium on Diversity in the Sciences, 2006
After the first quarter
New or On-going ResearchPre-MAP Field TripsPlanetarium TrainingUndergraduate Research SymposiumAdvising (classes, long-term planning)MentoringOpportunities (internships, REUs, etc.)
Additional SupportActively help students become aware of:
Programs offering tuition assistanceStudent support serviceTutoring and counseling centersCenter for Undergraduate Research Graduate Placement OfficeCareer Placement and Counseling OfficeFaculty development activitiesCenter for the Advancement of TeachingCenter for Undergraduate ResearchResearch opportunities (both paid and unpaid)
Tuajuanda C. Jordan, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington Symposium on Diversity in the Sciences, 2006
Remember...The Pre-MAP students are entering FRESHMEN!
Freshmen CAN do research and they ARE intellectually curious. They want opportunities to explore!
Big picture & best practices FIRST!! (Not at the end of their 4 year college experience, when/if they have made it through a vast laundry list of requirements. Motivate students’ STEM studies EARLY.)
Science is exciting! Research is fun, collaborative, and challenging.
What works well for students from underrepresented groups benefits all students. Diversity Works, Smith, D. (1997)
Pre-MAP’s FuturePossible expansion of the Pre-MAP model into other U.W. STEM departments to establish a Pre-Science Major (PrSM; “prism”)
Applications for NSF or other funding to support the program and/or its expansion
Collaboration with on-campus organizations (e.g. Center for Workforce Development) to identify and evaluate the program’s most effective methods and overall outcomes
On-going mentoring of Pre-MAP students, since they are our
REAL FUTURE!
ResourcesThe BEST (Building Engineering and Science Talent) initiative, The Talent Imperative: Diversifying America's Science and Engineering Workforce (2004).
Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine, Rising Above The Gathering Storm: Energizing and Employing America for a Brighter Economic Future, National Academies Press (2006).
Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy of National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine, Beyond Bias and Barriers: Fulfilling the Potential of Women in Academic Science and Engineering (2006).
NSF 06-320, “Characteristics of Doctoral Scientists and Engineers in the United States: 2003”, National Science Foundation (Arlington, VA, 2006).
NSF 04-317, “Women, Minorities, and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering: 2004”, National Science Foundation (Arlington, VA, 2004; updated May 2004).
NSB 03-69, “The Science and Engineering Workforce Realizing America's Potential, National Science Board Report (2003).
Jordan, Tuajuanda C., “Attrition vs. Retention - Is it a Question of `Survival of the Fittest'?” a presentation made at the University of Washington Symposia on Diversity in the Sciences (2006).
Huang, G., et al., Entry and Persistence of Women and Minorities in College Science and Engineering Education, Department of Education (2000).
Seymour, E. & Hewitt, N., Talking About Leaving: Why Undergraduates Leave the Sciences, Westview Press (Boulder, CO, 1997).
Smith, D.G. et al., Diversity Works: The Emerging Picture of How Students Benefit, Washington, D.C.: Association of American Colleges and Universities (1997).
Students!! They know a lot about
what they need.
Brought to you by…
Our Wonderful and AMAZING Pre-MAP Staff!