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McGee, Ebony O.; Thakore, Bhoomi K.; LaBlance, Sandra S. – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2017
This qualitative study used narrative methodology to investigate what becoming a scientist or engineer entails for Asian and Asian American college students stereotyped as "model minorities." We present the narratives of 23 high-achieving science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) college students who self-identified as…
Descriptors: Asian American Students, College Students, Ethnic Stereotypes, High Achievement
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Scherr, Rachel E.; Plisch, Monica; Gray, Kara E.; Potvin, Geoff; Hodapp, Theodore – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2017
Considering the evidence that standard physics graduate admissions practices tend to exclude women and traditionally marginalized racial and ethnic groups from the discipline, we investigate (a) the characteristics of students that physics graduate admissions committee members seek to admit to their programs and (b) the practices associated with…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Physics, College Admission, Intelligence
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McGee, Ebony O. – American Educational Research Journal, 2016
At some point most Black and Latino/a college students--even long-term high achievers--question their own abilities because of multiple forms of racial bias. The 38 high-achieving Black and Latino/a STEM study participants, who attended institutions with racially hostile academic spaces, deployed an arsenal of strategies (e.g., stereotype…
Descriptors: African American Students, Hispanic American Students, College Students, STEM Education
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Pyne, Kimberly B.; Means, Darris R. – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2013
Despite improvements in the rates of college admission over the past few decades, college persistence, retention, and graduation rates continue to be problematic for underrepresented students--students of color and students from low-income and/or first-generation families. This article presents a case study of a female, first-generation,…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, First Generation College Students, Hispanic American Students, Personal Narratives