Role model and prototype matching: Upper-secondary school students' meetings with tertiary STEM students

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Role model and prototype matching : Upper-secondary school students' meetings with tertiary STEM students. / Lykkegaard, Eva; Ulriksen, Lars.

I: NorDiNa, Bind 12, Nr. 1, 27.04.2016, s. 73-89.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lykkegaard, E & Ulriksen, L 2016, 'Role model and prototype matching: Upper-secondary school students' meetings with tertiary STEM students', NorDiNa, bind 12, nr. 1, s. 73-89.

APA

Lykkegaard, E., & Ulriksen, L. (2016). Role model and prototype matching: Upper-secondary school students' meetings with tertiary STEM students. NorDiNa, 12(1), 73-89.

Vancouver

Lykkegaard E, Ulriksen L. Role model and prototype matching: Upper-secondary school students' meetings with tertiary STEM students. NorDiNa. 2016 apr. 27;12(1):73-89.

Author

Lykkegaard, Eva ; Ulriksen, Lars. / Role model and prototype matching : Upper-secondary school students' meetings with tertiary STEM students. I: NorDiNa. 2016 ; Bind 12, Nr. 1. s. 73-89.

Bibtex

@article{f0e69cb425384e339c36ed29a06538d0,
title = "Role model and prototype matching: Upper-secondary school students' meetings with tertiary STEM students",
abstract = "Previous research has found that young people{\textquoteright}s prototypes of science students and scientists affect their inclination to choose tertiary STEM programs (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics). Consequently, many recruitment initiatives include role models to challenge these prototypes. The present study followed 15 STEM-oriented upper-secondary school students from university-distant backgrounds during and after their participation in an 18-months long university-based recruitment and outreach project involving tertiary STEM students as role models. The analysis focusses on how the students{\textquoteright} meetings with the role models affected their thoughts concerning STEM students and attending university. The regular self-to-prototype matching process was shown in real-life role-models meetings to be extended to a more complex three-way matching process between students{\textquoteright} self-perceptions, prototype images and situation-specific conceptions of role models. Furthermore, the study underlined the positive effect of prolonged role-model contact, the importance of using several role models and that traditional school subjects catered more resistant prototype images than unfamiliar ones did",
author = "Eva Lykkegaard and Lars Ulriksen",
year = "2016",
month = apr,
day = "27",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "73--89",
journal = "NorDiNa: Nordic Studies in Science Education",
issn = "1504-4556",
publisher = "Naturfagsenteret",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Role model and prototype matching

T2 - Upper-secondary school students' meetings with tertiary STEM students

AU - Lykkegaard, Eva

AU - Ulriksen, Lars

PY - 2016/4/27

Y1 - 2016/4/27

N2 - Previous research has found that young people’s prototypes of science students and scientists affect their inclination to choose tertiary STEM programs (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics). Consequently, many recruitment initiatives include role models to challenge these prototypes. The present study followed 15 STEM-oriented upper-secondary school students from university-distant backgrounds during and after their participation in an 18-months long university-based recruitment and outreach project involving tertiary STEM students as role models. The analysis focusses on how the students’ meetings with the role models affected their thoughts concerning STEM students and attending university. The regular self-to-prototype matching process was shown in real-life role-models meetings to be extended to a more complex three-way matching process between students’ self-perceptions, prototype images and situation-specific conceptions of role models. Furthermore, the study underlined the positive effect of prolonged role-model contact, the importance of using several role models and that traditional school subjects catered more resistant prototype images than unfamiliar ones did

AB - Previous research has found that young people’s prototypes of science students and scientists affect their inclination to choose tertiary STEM programs (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics). Consequently, many recruitment initiatives include role models to challenge these prototypes. The present study followed 15 STEM-oriented upper-secondary school students from university-distant backgrounds during and after their participation in an 18-months long university-based recruitment and outreach project involving tertiary STEM students as role models. The analysis focusses on how the students’ meetings with the role models affected their thoughts concerning STEM students and attending university. The regular self-to-prototype matching process was shown in real-life role-models meetings to be extended to a more complex three-way matching process between students’ self-perceptions, prototype images and situation-specific conceptions of role models. Furthermore, the study underlined the positive effect of prolonged role-model contact, the importance of using several role models and that traditional school subjects catered more resistant prototype images than unfamiliar ones did

UR - file:///C:/Users/hlk413/Downloads/1209-9087-1-PB.pdf

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

SP - 73

EP - 89

JO - NorDiNa: Nordic Studies in Science Education

JF - NorDiNa: Nordic Studies in Science Education

SN - 1504-4556

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 160830265