Full metadata
Title
Growth mindset training to increase women's self-efficacy in science and engineering: a randomized-controlled trial
Description
Undeclared undergraduates participated in an experimental study designed to explore the impact of an Internet-delivered "growth mindset" training on indicators of women's engagement in science, engineering, technology, and mathematics ("STEM") disciplines. This intervention was hypothesized to increase STEM self-efficacy and intentions to pursue STEM by strengthening beliefs in intelligence as malleable ("IQ attitude") and discrediting gender-math stereotypes (strengthening "stereotype disbelief"). Hypothesized relationships between these outcome variables were specified in a path model. The intervention was also hypothesized to bolster academic achievement. Participants consisted of 298 women and 191 men, the majority of whom were self-identified as White (62%) and 18 years old (85%) at the time of the study. Comparison group participants received training on persuasive writing styles and control group participants received no training. Participants were randomly assigned to treatment, comparison, or control groups. At posttest, treatment group scores on measures of IQ attitude, stereotype disbelief, and academic achievement were highest; the effects of group condition on these three outcomes were statistically significant as assessed by analysis of variance. Results of pairwise comparisons indicated that treatment group IQ attitude scores were significantly higher than the average IQ attitude scores of both comparison and control groups. Treatment group scores on stereotype disbelief were significantly higher than those of the comparison group but not those of the control group. GPAs of treatment group participants were significantly higher than those of control group participants but not those of comparison group participants. The effects of group condition on STEM self-efficacy or intentions to pursue STEM were not significant. Results of path analysis indicated that the hypothesized model of the relationships between variables fit to an acceptable degree. However, a model with gender-specific paths from IQ attitude and stereotype disbelief to STEM self-efficacy was found to be superior to the hypothesized model. IQ attitude and stereotype disbelief were positively related; IQ attitude was positively related to men's STEM self-efficacy; stereotype disbelief was positively related to women's STEM self-efficacy, and STEM self-efficacy was positively related to intentions to pursue STEM. Implications and study limitations are discussed, and directions for future research are proposed.
Date Created
2014
Contributors
- Fabert, Natalie Shay (Author)
- Bernstein, Bianca L. (Thesis advisor)
- Kinnier, Richard (Committee member)
- Dawes, Mary (Committee member)
- Bekki, Jennifer (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- Counseling psychology
- Educational Psychology
- Social Psychology
- academic intervention
- Achievement motivation
- career counseling
- Gender Stereotypes
- growth mindset
- Self-efficacy
- Women In Science
- Women in Engineering
- Stereotypes (Social psychology)
- Self-efficacy
- Academic Achievement
- Women college students--Psychology.
- Women college students
Resource Type
Extent
xiv, 259 p. : ill
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25875
Statement of Responsibility
by Natalie Shay Fabert
Description Source
Viewed on February 11, 2015
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph. D., Arizona State University, 2014
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 125-142)
Field of study: Counseling psychology
System Created
- 2014-10-01 05:01:22
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:33:08
- 3 years 2 months ago
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