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Gender Differences in Student Comfort Voluntarily Asking and Answering Questions in Large-Enrollment College Science Courses

Allowing students to ask and answer questions is a common practice employed by college science instructors. However, recent literature has identified that women participate in whole-class discussions less often than men. One hypothesized reason for this gender gap is that women may be less comfortab...

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Autores principales: Nadile, Erika M., Williams, Keonti D., Wiesenthal, Nicholas J., Stahlhut, Katherine N., Sinda, Krystian A., Sellas, Christopher F., Salcedo, Flor, Rivera Camacho, Yasiel I., Perez, Shannon G., King, Meagan L., Hutt, Airyn E., Heiden, Alyssa, Gooding, George, Gomez-Rosado, Jomaries O., Ford, Sariah A., Ferreira, Isabella, Chin, Megan R., Bevan-Thomas, William D., Barreiros, Briana M., Alfonso, Emilie, Zheng, Yi, Cooper, Katelyn M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8439613/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34594434
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jmbe.00100-21
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author Nadile, Erika M.
Williams, Keonti D.
Wiesenthal, Nicholas J.
Stahlhut, Katherine N.
Sinda, Krystian A.
Sellas, Christopher F.
Salcedo, Flor
Rivera Camacho, Yasiel I.
Perez, Shannon G.
King, Meagan L.
Hutt, Airyn E.
Heiden, Alyssa
Gooding, George
Gomez-Rosado, Jomaries O.
Ford, Sariah A.
Ferreira, Isabella
Chin, Megan R.
Bevan-Thomas, William D.
Barreiros, Briana M.
Alfonso, Emilie
Zheng, Yi
Cooper, Katelyn M.
author_facet Nadile, Erika M.
Williams, Keonti D.
Wiesenthal, Nicholas J.
Stahlhut, Katherine N.
Sinda, Krystian A.
Sellas, Christopher F.
Salcedo, Flor
Rivera Camacho, Yasiel I.
Perez, Shannon G.
King, Meagan L.
Hutt, Airyn E.
Heiden, Alyssa
Gooding, George
Gomez-Rosado, Jomaries O.
Ford, Sariah A.
Ferreira, Isabella
Chin, Megan R.
Bevan-Thomas, William D.
Barreiros, Briana M.
Alfonso, Emilie
Zheng, Yi
Cooper, Katelyn M.
author_sort Nadile, Erika M.
collection PubMed
description Allowing students to ask and answer questions is a common practice employed by college science instructors. However, recent literature has identified that women participate in whole-class discussions less often than men. One hypothesized reason for this gender gap is that women may be less comfortable participating. However, no studies have examined students’ comfort with asking and answering questions in large-enrollment science courses, identified what about these practices might make students uncomfortable, or explored whether there are gender differences with regard to student comfort. To answer these questions, we surveyed 417 undergraduates at an R1 institution about their experiences asking and answering questions in large-enrollment college science courses. Students answered questions about the extent to which they felt comfortable both asking and answering questions and selected possible factors that could make them uncomfortable participating. Using binary logistic regression, we tested whether student demographics predicted their opinions about these practices. Over half of students reported feeling uncomfortable both asking and answering questions in front of college science classes, and women were significantly less comfortable than men both asking and answering questions. Furthermore, we identified student confidence regarding their knowledge of the material and a concern that other students would judge them as some of the primary factors that could cause students to feel uncomfortable asking and answering questions in front of the whole class. This work highlights factors that instructors can target in hopes of maximizing student comfort participating in large-enrollment college science courses.
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spelling pubmed-84396132021-09-29 Gender Differences in Student Comfort Voluntarily Asking and Answering Questions in Large-Enrollment College Science Courses Nadile, Erika M. Williams, Keonti D. Wiesenthal, Nicholas J. Stahlhut, Katherine N. Sinda, Krystian A. Sellas, Christopher F. Salcedo, Flor Rivera Camacho, Yasiel I. Perez, Shannon G. King, Meagan L. Hutt, Airyn E. Heiden, Alyssa Gooding, George Gomez-Rosado, Jomaries O. Ford, Sariah A. Ferreira, Isabella Chin, Megan R. Bevan-Thomas, William D. Barreiros, Briana M. Alfonso, Emilie Zheng, Yi Cooper, Katelyn M. J Microbiol Biol Educ Research Article Allowing students to ask and answer questions is a common practice employed by college science instructors. However, recent literature has identified that women participate in whole-class discussions less often than men. One hypothesized reason for this gender gap is that women may be less comfortable participating. However, no studies have examined students’ comfort with asking and answering questions in large-enrollment science courses, identified what about these practices might make students uncomfortable, or explored whether there are gender differences with regard to student comfort. To answer these questions, we surveyed 417 undergraduates at an R1 institution about their experiences asking and answering questions in large-enrollment college science courses. Students answered questions about the extent to which they felt comfortable both asking and answering questions and selected possible factors that could make them uncomfortable participating. Using binary logistic regression, we tested whether student demographics predicted their opinions about these practices. Over half of students reported feeling uncomfortable both asking and answering questions in front of college science classes, and women were significantly less comfortable than men both asking and answering questions. Furthermore, we identified student confidence regarding their knowledge of the material and a concern that other students would judge them as some of the primary factors that could cause students to feel uncomfortable asking and answering questions in front of the whole class. This work highlights factors that instructors can target in hopes of maximizing student comfort participating in large-enrollment college science courses. American Society for Microbiology 2021-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8439613/ /pubmed/34594434 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jmbe.00100-21 Text en Copyright © 2021 Nadile et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Nadile, Erika M.
Williams, Keonti D.
Wiesenthal, Nicholas J.
Stahlhut, Katherine N.
Sinda, Krystian A.
Sellas, Christopher F.
Salcedo, Flor
Rivera Camacho, Yasiel I.
Perez, Shannon G.
King, Meagan L.
Hutt, Airyn E.
Heiden, Alyssa
Gooding, George
Gomez-Rosado, Jomaries O.
Ford, Sariah A.
Ferreira, Isabella
Chin, Megan R.
Bevan-Thomas, William D.
Barreiros, Briana M.
Alfonso, Emilie
Zheng, Yi
Cooper, Katelyn M.
Gender Differences in Student Comfort Voluntarily Asking and Answering Questions in Large-Enrollment College Science Courses
title Gender Differences in Student Comfort Voluntarily Asking and Answering Questions in Large-Enrollment College Science Courses
title_full Gender Differences in Student Comfort Voluntarily Asking and Answering Questions in Large-Enrollment College Science Courses
title_fullStr Gender Differences in Student Comfort Voluntarily Asking and Answering Questions in Large-Enrollment College Science Courses
title_full_unstemmed Gender Differences in Student Comfort Voluntarily Asking and Answering Questions in Large-Enrollment College Science Courses
title_short Gender Differences in Student Comfort Voluntarily Asking and Answering Questions in Large-Enrollment College Science Courses
title_sort gender differences in student comfort voluntarily asking and answering questions in large-enrollment college science courses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8439613/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34594434
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jmbe.00100-21
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