Self Confidence and Diversity at MIT Lizz Albany, Olivia Gierlich, Peter Lee, and Michael Plasmeier.

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Self Confidence and Diversity at MIT Lizz Albany, Olivia Gierlich, Peter Lee, and Michael Plasmeier

Transcript of Self Confidence and Diversity at MIT Lizz Albany, Olivia Gierlich, Peter Lee, and Michael Plasmeier.

Page 1: Self Confidence and Diversity at MIT Lizz Albany, Olivia Gierlich, Peter Lee, and Michael Plasmeier.

Self Confidence and Diversity at MITLizz Albany, Olivia Gierlich, Peter Lee, and Michael Plasmeier

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How many of you think self-esteem is important?

Do you think your academic self-esteem is directly affected

by your gender or race?

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Agenda

1. Introduction: Examining the self-esteem of MIT students

2. Literature Review: Current theories and what makes MIT different

3. Research Design: Distributing our Survey4. Analysis: Examining the Data for Differences5. Conclusion: Are MIT students really

different?

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Importance of Examining Self-Esteem

oFor individualso self-esteem affects performance in all aspects of life

o At MIT o creating a sense of equality

oIn Americao unemployment rates are higher for minoritieso self confidence is an influential component of job

interviews and other work-related interactions

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What Current Literature has Revealed

oTwo conflicting schools of thought:1. Minorities have lower self-esteem

oStereotype ThreatoPreferential Treatment

2. Minorities have equal or higher self-esteemoAcademic DisidentificationoSocial Reference Theory

oGeneral literary conclusion: minorities will have the same or higher relative self-esteem, women will have lower self-esteem relative to their peers

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Hypothesis: Minorities and women at MIT have a lower relative self-

esteem

oWhy is MIT different?oPrestigious InstitutionoMeritocracy AttitudesoRepresentative DemographicsoGenerous Financial Aid

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Methods

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Who is our target audience?oMIT Undergraduate populationoSent to:

oDormso SororitiesoFraternitieso Student Clubs

oGoal:oCollect a varied sample from across campus

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What did we distribute?oShort electronic survey

oConsent FormoAcademic Self-ConfidenceoDemographicsoGender StigmaoRacial Stigma

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Academic Self Concept (ASC)

o Examine effects on academic self-concepto Created by Liu and Wang of Nanyang University in

Singaporeo 7 Point scaleo Sample: “I am usually interested in my schoolwork” or

“I am always waiting for the lessons to end”o Positive and Negative questions

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Stigma Consciousness Questionnaires (SCQ)

oQuestions by Pinel from UT AustinoAsks about perceptions of discrimination o Sample: “Stereotypes about women have not affected

me personally” or “Most men have a lot more sexist thoughts than they actually express”

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Results

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Hypotheses

oH0 = ASCMale = ASCFemale

oH1 = ASCMale ≠ ASCFemale

oH0 = ASCCaucasian = ASCAfrican American = ASCAsian = ASCHispanic =ASCOther

oH1 = ASCCaucasian ≠ ASCAfrican American ≠ ASCAsian ≠ ASCHispanic ≠ ASCOther

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Males have a higher academic self concept than females

t: -4.59; p < .0001

Male Female3

4

5

6

7

4.984.65

ASC

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Males and females perceive similar amounts of stigma regarding their

gender

t = -1.35; p = .175

Male Female3

4

5

6

7

4.08 3.95

SCQ

Gen

der

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Each race has a similar academic self concept…

F = 1.03; p = .387

African American

Asian Caucasian Hispanic Other3

4

5

6

7

4.684.86 4.79

4.63 4.7ASC

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…but African Americans, Asians, and Hispanics perceived a racial stigma

vs Caucasian base line

F=7.53; p < .0001

Africa

n Am

erican

Asian

Caucasia

n

Hispanic

Other

3

4

5

6

7

4.96

4.14 3.984.28

4.02

SCQ

Rac

e

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Greek participation made no difference in academic self concept

t = .1696, p = .86

Greek Not Greek3

4

5

6

7

4.77 4.76ASC

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ASC Scale Regression

4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 5

Baseline

Female AsianHispanic

Other Race

Greek

Year

African American

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SCQ Gender Regression

3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 4 4.1 4.2

Baseline

Female

Asian

Hispanic

Other Race

Greek

Year

African American

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SCQ Race Regression

3 3.2 3.4 3.6 3.8 4 4.2 4.4 4.6 4.8

Baseline

Female

Asian

Hispanic

Other Race

Year

African American

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Summary of Results

oMales have a higher academic self conceptoGender stigma consciousness is largely the sameoRace stigma consciousness exists at MIT, but race does

not have a statistically significant effect on academic self concept

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Discussion

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Outcome

oThere is no statistically significant difference to support our hypothesis

oMIT is not unique in these parameters

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Implications

oAcademic environment may not impact a student’s academic self confidence as compared to their peers, particularly those of a different race or gender

oOther factors, such as socioeconomic status, may override the impact of academic environment

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Limitations

oOur survey was conducted on a small scaleo Responses represented <10% of the student population

oWe did not ask for parameters like GPAoWe did not know the source schools of the prior

research, preventing direct comparisons with them

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Next Steps

oMIT on a larger, more comprehensive scaleoMIT vs. a less prestigious institutionoMIT vs. another prestigious institution

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Questions?