Does Outreach Impact Choices of Major for Underrepresented Undergraduate Students?
Over the last decade, there has been a concerted effort to bring more diverse voices to the technology field, with much of this being done through outreach activities to girls and boys. Unfortunately, data demonstrating the long-term impact of outreach activities remains rare. To contribute to knowledge on the longitudinal effect of outreach programs, we used a quantitative methodology that followed a descriptive design approach to explore the impact of participation in outreach activities on the choice of undergraduate major. Of those surveyed, 45.3% of the 770 respondents recalled participating in these activities. The results indicate that these activities had a more positive impact on Asians and more negative impact on Hispanics. Blacks/African Americans were more likely to voluntarily participate in outreach activities than Hispanics, and whites were more likely to feel that they were a welcome part of the group than non-whites. The results also may indicate that when outreach programs are available in earlier grades, they are not reaching non-white participants to the same extent as white participants.
Does Outreach Impact Choices of Major for Underrepresented Undergraduate Students?
- Author McGill, Monica M.; Decker, Adrienne; Settle, Amber
- Publication Title Proceedings Of The Eleventh Annual International Conference On International Computing Education Research
- Publication Year 2015
- BPC Focus Underrepresented Racial/Ethnic Groups, Black/African American Students, Latinx/Hispanic
- Methodology Survey, Longitudinal, Multi-institution
- Analytic Method T-test, Chi-square/Contingency Table, ANOVA, Correlation, Confidence Interval
- Institution Type NA
- DOI 10.1145/2787622.2787711
- URL https://doi.org/10.1145/2787622.2787711