Exploring Latent Profiles of Stereotype Threat Susceptibility in U.S. and Colombian Students

Katherine Picho, Tatiana Rojas-Ospina, Adriana Maria Caicedo-Tamayo

Producción: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

Introduction. The present study investigated the theoretical Stereotyping Threat susceptibility groups proposed by Steele (1997) by using a latent class analysis. Method: 413 undergraduate students from the U.S and Colombia, majoring in various Science Technology Engineering and Math (STEM) and non-STEM disciplines completed a stereotype threat susceptibility measure— the Social Identities and Attitudes Scale, SIAS (Picho & Brown, 2011). Results: For U.S. women in STEM results indicated the presence of three ST susceptibility profiles (i.e., low and high ST susceptibility classes and a disengaged class) and two variations of an un-identified class in the non-STEM sample. High and low susceptibility to ST classes were found for Colombian women in STEM, while the non-STEM sample yielded disengaged and un-identified classes. In both countries, over 70% of the women in STEM were classified as highly susceptible to ST. Discussion: This is the first study investigating latent profiles of susceptibility to ST (SST) so additional replication with samples from different populations is strongly recommended. Extensive investigation into latent profiles of ST susceptibility could provide the insight required to develop differentiated ST reduction strategies for students in STEM and non-STEM fields of study.

Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)473-506
Número de páginas34
PublicaciónElectronic Journal of Research in Educational Psychology
Volumen18
N.º52
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 2020

Huella

Profundice en los temas de investigación de 'Exploring Latent Profiles of Stereotype Threat Susceptibility in U.S. and Colombian Students'. En conjunto forman una huella única.

Citar esto