Reasons for not/choosing chemistry: Why advanced level chemistry students in England do/not pursue chemistry undergraduate degrees

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Reasons for not/choosing chemistry : Why advanced level chemistry students in England do/not pursue chemistry undergraduate degrees. / Archer, Louise; Francis, Becky; Moote, Julie; Watson, Emma; Henderson, Morag; Holmegaard, Henriette; MacLeod, Emily.

In: Journal of Research in Science Teaching, Vol. 60, No. 5, 2023, p. 978-1013.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Archer, L, Francis, B, Moote, J, Watson, E, Henderson, M, Holmegaard, H & MacLeod, E 2023, 'Reasons for not/choosing chemistry: Why advanced level chemistry students in England do/not pursue chemistry undergraduate degrees', Journal of Research in Science Teaching, vol. 60, no. 5, pp. 978-1013. https://doi.org/10.1002/tea.21822

APA

Archer, L., Francis, B., Moote, J., Watson, E., Henderson, M., Holmegaard, H., & MacLeod, E. (2023). Reasons for not/choosing chemistry: Why advanced level chemistry students in England do/not pursue chemistry undergraduate degrees. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 60(5), 978-1013. https://doi.org/10.1002/tea.21822

Vancouver

Archer L, Francis B, Moote J, Watson E, Henderson M, Holmegaard H et al. Reasons for not/choosing chemistry: Why advanced level chemistry students in England do/not pursue chemistry undergraduate degrees. Journal of Research in Science Teaching. 2023;60(5):978-1013. https://doi.org/10.1002/tea.21822

Author

Archer, Louise ; Francis, Becky ; Moote, Julie ; Watson, Emma ; Henderson, Morag ; Holmegaard, Henriette ; MacLeod, Emily. / Reasons for not/choosing chemistry : Why advanced level chemistry students in England do/not pursue chemistry undergraduate degrees. In: Journal of Research in Science Teaching. 2023 ; Vol. 60, No. 5. pp. 978-1013.

Bibtex

@article{4d9c4bd0047441ec8d01d8eb4bea7a25,
title = "Reasons for not/choosing chemistry: Why advanced level chemistry students in England do/not pursue chemistry undergraduate degrees",
abstract = "There are international concerns about decreasing rates of chemistry degree enrolment. This article seeks to understand students' reasons for not/choosing to pursue a chemistry degree, drawing on (i) open-ended survey responses from a sample of 506 students in England aged 21–22 who had studied advanced level (“A level”) chemistry at age 18 (as either a full A level or a half “AS” level) and had either chosen (n = 70) or not chosen (n = 436) to pursue undergraduate chemistry and (ii) 185 interviews conducted with a subsample of 18 young people who had been longitudinally tracked from age 10 to 22 (with 17 of their parents) who took advanced level chemistry and then either did (n = 5), or did not (n = 13) go on to study for a chemistry degree. Analysis revealed four key reasons for not/choosing chemistry that were present to varying extents in both the quantitative and qualitative data (relative interest, connection and options; experiences of chemistry A level; feeling “not/clever enough”; and views of chemistry jobs). Four additional factors were predominantly found in the qualitative data (associations of chemistry with masculinity; encouragement from a significant adult; views of higher education; and chemistry work experience/outreach). Applying a sociological lens, we suggest that not/choosing chemistry was a relational process, produced through interactions of habitus, capital, and field. We identify conceptual and methodological implications and extrapolate reasons why chemistry degree enrolments may be declining, offering suggestions for how chemistry education might further support participation.",
keywords = "Bourdieu, chemistry, degree choice, subject choice",
author = "Louise Archer and Becky Francis and Julie Moote and Emma Watson and Morag Henderson and Henriette Holmegaard and Emily MacLeod",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 The Authors. Journal of Research in Science Teaching published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of National Association for Research in Science Teaching.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1002/tea.21822",
language = "English",
volume = "60",
pages = "978--1013",
journal = "Journal of Research in Science Teaching",
issn = "0022-4308",
publisher = "JohnWiley & Sons, Inc.",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Reasons for not/choosing chemistry

T2 - Why advanced level chemistry students in England do/not pursue chemistry undergraduate degrees

AU - Archer, Louise

AU - Francis, Becky

AU - Moote, Julie

AU - Watson, Emma

AU - Henderson, Morag

AU - Holmegaard, Henriette

AU - MacLeod, Emily

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Journal of Research in Science Teaching published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of National Association for Research in Science Teaching.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - There are international concerns about decreasing rates of chemistry degree enrolment. This article seeks to understand students' reasons for not/choosing to pursue a chemistry degree, drawing on (i) open-ended survey responses from a sample of 506 students in England aged 21–22 who had studied advanced level (“A level”) chemistry at age 18 (as either a full A level or a half “AS” level) and had either chosen (n = 70) or not chosen (n = 436) to pursue undergraduate chemistry and (ii) 185 interviews conducted with a subsample of 18 young people who had been longitudinally tracked from age 10 to 22 (with 17 of their parents) who took advanced level chemistry and then either did (n = 5), or did not (n = 13) go on to study for a chemistry degree. Analysis revealed four key reasons for not/choosing chemistry that were present to varying extents in both the quantitative and qualitative data (relative interest, connection and options; experiences of chemistry A level; feeling “not/clever enough”; and views of chemistry jobs). Four additional factors were predominantly found in the qualitative data (associations of chemistry with masculinity; encouragement from a significant adult; views of higher education; and chemistry work experience/outreach). Applying a sociological lens, we suggest that not/choosing chemistry was a relational process, produced through interactions of habitus, capital, and field. We identify conceptual and methodological implications and extrapolate reasons why chemistry degree enrolments may be declining, offering suggestions for how chemistry education might further support participation.

AB - There are international concerns about decreasing rates of chemistry degree enrolment. This article seeks to understand students' reasons for not/choosing to pursue a chemistry degree, drawing on (i) open-ended survey responses from a sample of 506 students in England aged 21–22 who had studied advanced level (“A level”) chemistry at age 18 (as either a full A level or a half “AS” level) and had either chosen (n = 70) or not chosen (n = 436) to pursue undergraduate chemistry and (ii) 185 interviews conducted with a subsample of 18 young people who had been longitudinally tracked from age 10 to 22 (with 17 of their parents) who took advanced level chemistry and then either did (n = 5), or did not (n = 13) go on to study for a chemistry degree. Analysis revealed four key reasons for not/choosing chemistry that were present to varying extents in both the quantitative and qualitative data (relative interest, connection and options; experiences of chemistry A level; feeling “not/clever enough”; and views of chemistry jobs). Four additional factors were predominantly found in the qualitative data (associations of chemistry with masculinity; encouragement from a significant adult; views of higher education; and chemistry work experience/outreach). Applying a sociological lens, we suggest that not/choosing chemistry was a relational process, produced through interactions of habitus, capital, and field. We identify conceptual and methodological implications and extrapolate reasons why chemistry degree enrolments may be declining, offering suggestions for how chemistry education might further support participation.

KW - Bourdieu

KW - chemistry

KW - degree choice

KW - subject choice

U2 - 10.1002/tea.21822

DO - 10.1002/tea.21822

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85139462358

VL - 60

SP - 978

EP - 1013

JO - Journal of Research in Science Teaching

JF - Journal of Research in Science Teaching

SN - 0022-4308

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 327695606