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Giving Compass' Take:
• Cailin Riley-Missouri shares strategies for creating more inclusive STEM spaces to encourage marginalized communities, particularly women of color.
• How can funders work to create inclusive STEM practices at scale?
• Learn more about building diverse and inclusive STEM programming.
The National Science Foundation reports that women of color constitute fewer than 1 in 10 employed scientists and engineers. And the women of color who are in STEM aren’t necessarily seeing their identities reflected and incorporated in STEM fields.
“Imagine walking into a lab or a classroom and seeing pictures of people on the walls that are nothing like you,” says Terrell Morton, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Missouri. “People have a very narrow view of what science looks like, and right now, it’s older white men wearing goggles and holding beakers. When a young woman of color sees those images in a learning environment, it can make her feel unwelcome because there is nothing in that image that represents her.”
Morton says educators can help support women of color pursuing STEM degrees by creating inclusive classroom environments and prioritizing activities that intentionally and meaningfully incorporate students’ personal identities and experiences.
For example:
- Being mindful of the images on the walls of classrooms and labs and the identities they represent.
- Being mindful of the readings used, problems investigated, solutions generated in courses, and whose voice(s) and communities are and are not represented.
- Asking students to share their stories, backgrounds, and goals with the class. This encourages community support and helps all students succeed.
- Provide diverse historical and contemporary role models (their background and their work) in STEM classes through case studies, stories, films, guest speakers, and class instruction.
Morton interviewed 10 black women in STEM programs at two southeastern universities to hear their experiences of pursuing a degree in a field that is overwhelmingly white and male. Morton found that despite many alienating and isolating classroom experiences in pursuit of their degrees, all of the black women in the study firmly wanted to continue in the field.
Read the full article about building more inclusive STEM programs by Cailin Riley-Missouri at Futurity.