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Soldiers to Scientists: Military Service, Gender, and STEM Degree Earning

Authors :
Steidl, Christina
Werum, Regina E.
Harcey, Sela R.
Absalon, Jacob
MillerMacPhee, Alice
Steidl, Christina
Werum, Regina E.
Harcey, Sela R.
Absalon, Jacob
MillerMacPhee, Alice
Source :
Sociology Department, Faculty Publications
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The authors use 2014–2018 data from the American Community Survey to answer two questions: To what extent is military service associated with higher rates of earning a bachelor’s degree in a science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) field (vs. a non-STEM field)? To what extent is this relationship gendered? The findings suggest that military service is associated with higher odds of completing a STEM degree and that this association is particularly strong for female veterans. Comparison across multiple STEM definitions suggests that military service does not simply channel women into traditionally female-dominated STEM fields. Instead, the findings show the biggest boost for women earning degrees in traditionally male-dominated STEM fields. The authors situate these findings in light of extant empirical and theoretical research on gender gaps in STEM and discuss implications for policy and research.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Sociology Department, Faculty Publications
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1237305253
Document Type :
Electronic Resource