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Female peer mentors early in college have lasting positive impacts on female engineering students that persist beyond graduation

Engineering and Technology

Female peer mentors early in college have lasting positive impacts on female engineering students that persist beyond graduation

D. J. Wu, K. C. Thiem, et al.

Explore the transformative effects of female peer mentors on women in engineering! This groundbreaking study by Deborah J. Wu, Kelsey C. Thiem, and Nilanjana Dasgupta reveals how mentorship can enhance psychological well-being, boost aspirations for further education, and improve internship success rates. Discover the lasting impact of this low-cost intervention that champions women's achievements in STEM fields.... show more
Abstract
Expanding the talent pipeline of students from underrepresented backgrounds in STEM has been a priority in the United States for decades. However, potential solutions to increase the number of such students in STEM academic pathways, measured using longitudinal randomized controlled trials in real-world contexts, have been limited. Here, we expand on an earlier investigation that reported results from a longitudinal field experiment in which undergraduate female students (N = 150) interested in engineering at college entry were randomly assigned a female peer mentor in engineering, a male peer mentor in engineering, or not assigned a mentor for their first year of college. While an earlier article presented findings from participants' first two years of college, the current article reports the same participants' academic experiences for each year in college through college graduation and one year post-graduation. Compared to the male peer mentor and no mentor condition, having a female peer mentor was associated with a significant improvement in participants' psychological experiences in engineering, aspirations to pursue postgraduate engineering degrees, and emotional well-being. It was also associated with participants' success in securing engineering internships and retention in STEM majors through college graduation. In sum, a low-cost, short peer mentoring intervention demonstrates benefits in promoting female students' success in engineering from college entry, through one-year post-graduation.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Nov 11, 2022
Authors
Deborah J. Wu, Kelsey C. Thiem, Nilanjana Dasgupta
Tags
female peer mentor
female engineering students
psychological experiences
postgraduate aspirations
emotional well-being
engineering internships
STEM retention
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