Reaching out to the hard-to-reach: mixed methods reflections of a pilot Welsh STEM engagement project

被引:0
|
作者
Rachel Bryan
Mary H Gagen
William A Bryan
Gwendoline I Wilson
Elizabeth Gagen
机构
[1] Swansea University,
[2] Aberystwyth University,undefined
来源
SN Social Sciences | / 2卷 / 2期
关键词
Science and education aspirations; Attainment; Social inclusion; STEM outreach; Science outreach; Widening participation; Widening access; Science capital; Hard-to-reach; Wales;
D O I
10.1007/s43545-021-00311-6
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Despite years of targeted interventions, young people experiencing socio-economic deprivation are still under-represented in those studying STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) subjects post-16 and in higher education STEM pathways. We surveyed 61 young people who had participated in the S4 programme in South Wales, UK, and interviewed three of their teachers. Using the theoretical lens of science capital, we asked them about the S4 programme, and their views of science and education in terms of aspirations, attainment, and social obstacles. Whilst widely outdated, a ‘deficit model’ of aspiration raising still guides STEM outreach policy in Wales and we consider the answers to our survey in light of this. Broadly, our participants are enthusiastic and ambitious, and confident in their abilities in both science and wider skill areas. However, we found certain aspects of ambition were linked to socio-economic status. For example, whilst most young people we surveyed aspire to go university, those who do not cite different reasons depending on their socio-economic status. Despite high aspirations around science and education, teachers cited low literacy and numeracy, household poverty, entrenched generational unemployment, rural isolation, disabilities, caring responsibilities, and teenage pregnancy as barriers to higher education for their pupils. Importantly, S4's intervention had the greatest impact with those in the extremes of socio-economic deprivation, particularly in terms of bolstering existing science and education aspirations and increasing the ‘thinkability’ of attending university. Our findings contradict accepted thinking on science and education aspirations in that rather than participation in higher education being motivated by a lack of science and education aspiration or the discourse of family habitus ("people like us"), young people seem to be starkly aware of the very real socio-economic obstacles. We found no poverty of science and education aspiration in the participants we surveyed, and encourage a policy move away from the deficit model of raising science and education aspirations that will take a more nuanced view of widening access to STEM education and higher education in general in Wales.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 17 条
  • [1] Online pedagogy: reaching out to the "hard-to-reach'' learners
    Devi, Anita
    McGarry, Andy
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGIES, 2013, 7 (01) : 34 - 46
  • [3] Reaching Hard-To-Reach Populations: an Analysis of Survey Recruitment Methods
    Xu, Xuecong
    Yan, Xiang
    Dillahunt, Tawanna R.
    [J]. CONFERENCE COMPANION PUBLICATION OF THE 2019 COMPUTER SUPPORTED COOPERATIVE WORK AND SOCIAL COMPUTING (CSCW'19 COMPANION), 2019, : 428 - 432
  • [4] REACHING OUT-OF-SCHOOL, HARD-TO-REACH YOUTH - NOTES ON DATA-GATHERING
    LUCHTERHAND, E
    WELLER, L
    [J]. ADOLESCENCE, 1979, 14 (56): : 747 - 753
  • [5] Reaching the Hard-To-Reach with Civic Education on the European Union: Insights from a German Model Project
    Oberle, Monika
    Stamer, Maerthe-Maria
    [J]. SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL, 2020, 9 (10): : 1 - 12
  • [6] Access barriers to maternal healthcare services in selected hard-to-reach areas of Zambia: a mixed methods design
    Mweemba, Chris
    Mapulanga, Miriam
    Jacobs, Choolwe
    Katowa-Mukwato, Patricia
    Maimbolwa, Margaret
    [J]. PAN AFRICAN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2021, 40
  • [7] Reflections on ethical dilemmas in working with so-called "vulnerable' and "hard-to-reach' groups: experiences from the Foodways and Futures project
    Gombert, Karolina
    Douglas, Flora
    McArdle, Karen
    Carlisle, Sandra
    [J]. EDUCATIONAL ACTION RESEARCH, 2016, 24 (04) : 583 - 597
  • [8] "Hard-To-Reach" or Hardly Reaching? Critical Reflections on Engaging Diverse Residents From Low Socio-Economic Status Neighborhoods in Public Health Research
    Aliyas, Zeinab
    Collins, Patricia A.
    Chrun-Tremblay, Shade
    Bayram, Tevfik
    Frohlich, Katherine L.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2023, 67
  • [9] Project Engage: Snowball Sampling and Direct Recruitment to Identify and Link Hard-to-Reach HIV-Infected Persons Who Are Out of Care
    Wohl, Amy Rock
    Ludwig-Barron, Natasha
    Dierst-Davies, Rhodri
    Kulkarni, Sonali
    Bendetson, Jesse
    Jordan, Wilbert
    Bolan, Robert
    Smith, Terry
    Cunningham, William
    Perez, Mario J.
    [J]. JAIDS-JOURNAL OF ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROMES, 2017, 75 (02) : 190 - 197
  • [10] Can lay health trainers increase uptake of NHS Health Checks in hard-to-reach populations? A mixed-method pilot evaluation
    Visram, S.
    Carr, S. M.
    Geddes, L.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2015, 37 (02) : 226 - 233