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Inspiring and Preparing Underserved Middle School Students for Computer Science: A Descriptive Case Study of the UNC Charlotte/Wilson STEM Academy Partnership.

Authors :
Mickelson, Roslyn Arlin
Mikkelsen, Ian
Dorodchi, Mohsen
Cukic, Bojan
Petro, Caitlin
Al Ayeisha, Zelaya
Alston, Shakayla
Teddy, Anthony
Win, Myat
Wiktor, Sandra
Sherman, Barry
Cook, Jeffrey
Source :
School Community Journal; Spring/Summer2024, Vol. 34 Issue 1, p127-158, 32p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Students from underrepresented populations--females, working class, and youth from marginalized racial/ethnic groups--are less likely than their middle-class Asian and White male peers to study computer science (CS) in college. The dearth of CS undergraduates from these groups contributes to projected labor force shortages. Sources of the dilemma include weak or absent inspiration and CS preparation in middle schools and negative stereotypes suggesting certain groups do not belong in CS. This case study describes three years of a community collaboration between a local university and a nearby middle school attended by primarily low-income students of color. The University of North Carolina Charlotte/Wilson STEM Academy Partnership focused on undergraduates majoring in CS teaching monthly workshops designed to inspire and academically prepare the middle schoolers for college and CS majors by teaching them coding and computational thinking while also challenging stereotypes about who belongs in CS. Post-workshop assessments, reflective essays, interviews, and administrative data were thematically coded. Findings suggest the workshops sparked interest in college and CS, undermined toxic stereotypes, and nurtured the academic self-confidence of middle schoolers. The Partnership provided the undergraduates with opportunities to meet their own academic goals while "paying it forward." Results suggest that the Partnership can serve as a model starting point for disrupting the disproportionalities in female and underrepresented minority students in CS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1059308X
Volume :
34
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
School Community Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177142519