2015
DOI: 10.1037/a0037461
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Two brief interventions to mitigate a “chilly climate” transform women’s experience, relationships, and achievement in engineering.

Abstract: In a randomized-controlled trial, we tested 2 brief interventions designed to mitigate the effects of a "chilly climate" women may experience in engineering, especially in male-dominated fields. Participants were students entering a selective university engineering program. The social-belonging intervention aimed to protect students' sense of belonging in engineering by providing a nonthreatening narrative with which to interpret instances of adversity. The affirmation-training intervention aimed to help stude… Show more

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Cited by 451 publications
(377 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, effects appeared to be mediated by the psychological and behavioral processes depicted in Fig. 1-for instance, asking professors or teaching assistants for help, attending office hours, or taking chances on making friends (11,17,25).…”
Section: Significancementioning
confidence: 98%
“…Furthermore, effects appeared to be mediated by the psychological and behavioral processes depicted in Fig. 1-for instance, asking professors or teaching assistants for help, attending office hours, or taking chances on making friends (11,17,25).…”
Section: Significancementioning
confidence: 98%
“…A similar pattern emerged among URM and FGC students, with lower mean scores than their counterparts but none of these differences were statistically significant. These lower scores are consistent with previous research on social belonging among female, URM and FGC students (Walton et al 2015) and the lack of statistical significance may be a result of the small sample size or the unique cultural aspects of this one testing site. Engineering identity appears to be an important discriminant factor among female, with statistically lower scores (-.17, p < .05) than their male counterparts.…”
Section: Research Question 3 (Rq3): How Is Classroom Belonging Definesupporting
confidence: 91%
“…The measurement of social belonging was accomplished using the Sense of Social and Academic Fit in STEM scale developed by Walton et al (2015) Responses were collected within a 7 point "agreement" range 1 and the items had good internal consistency (Cronbach α = .83).…”
Section: Measuring Social Belonging (Sb)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These findings are consistent with the idea that social-psychological factors act as barriers to student achievement in engineering, namely, feelings of doubt that one fits in to the academic environment. 8,9,10,11 If this uncertainty can be lessened by an instructional environment that produces greater social cohesion, then there are important implications for pedagogy in engineering education.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A similar intervention, used to target women in maledominated engineering majors, succeeded in raising women's engineering GPAs to males' levels and improved their attitudes towards academics and daily adversities. 9 Both of these studies and others (e.g., 10,11 ), illustrate the importance of social belonging to college students who are historically underrepresented in their academic environments. A sense of belonging improves self-efficacy for learning and promotes social integration for students who are insecure about their place on campus or in their chosen major.…”
Section: Social Belongingmentioning
confidence: 91%