Asset-Based Approach to Advancing Latina Students in STEM

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Asset-Based approach
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Category=JNAM
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Category=JNM
Category=JNU
Community Cultural Wealth
Diversity in STEM
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Female leadership
HSI
Intersectionality
Latina
Latina College Students
Latina Faculty
Latina Students
Latino
Latinx
Latinx Students
Mathematics
Mathematics education
Mentoring
Mentorship
Minorities in STEM
Minoritized Students
PCAST
Peer support
Post-graduate
Psychosociocultural model
Pursue Stem Degree
Resilience
Resiliency model
Science
Science and engineering
STEM
STEM Careers
Stem Degree
Stem Department
Stem Discipline
Stem Education
Stem Environment
Stem Experience
Stem Faculty
Stem Field
Stem Identity
Stem Job
Stem Major
Stem Program
Stem Student
Stem Undergraduate
Stem Undergraduate Degree
Stem Workforce
Student Mentor
Student resilience
Student retention
Study Stem
Technology' Engineering
Undergraduate
Women in Academia
Women in STEM
Women of color

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367433758
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Nov 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This timely volume challenges the ongoing underrepresentation of Latina women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), and highlights resilience as a critical communal response to increasing their representation in degree programs and academic posts.

An Asset-Based Approach to Advancing Latina Students in STEM documents the racialized and gendered experiences of Latinas studying and researching in STEM in US colleges, and centers resilience as a critical mechanism in combating deficit narratives. Adopting an asset-based approach, chapters illustrate how Latinas draw on their cultural background as a source of individual and communal strength, and indicate how this cultural wealth must be nurtured and used to inform leadership and policy to motivate, encourage, and support Latinas on the pathway to graduate degrees and successful STEM careers. By highlighting strategies to increase personal resilience and institutional retention of Latina women, the text offers key insights to bolstering diversity in STEM.

This text will primarily appeal to academics, scholars, educators, and researchers in the fields of STEM education. It will also benefit those working in broader areas of higher education and multicultural education, as well as those interested in the advancement of minorities inside and outside of academia.

Elsa M. Gonzalez is Assistant Professor of Higher Education at the University of Houston, USA.

Frank Fernandez is Assistant Professor of Higher Education at the University of Mississippi, USA.

Miranda Wilson earned a Ph.D. in Higher Education Leadership and Policy Studies at the University of Houston, USA.

Elsa M. Gonzalez is Assistant Professor of Higher Education at the University of Houston, USA.

Frank Fernandez is Assistant Professor of Higher Education at the University of Mississippi, USA.

Miranda Wilson earned a Ph.D. in Higher Education Leadership and Policy Studies at the University of Houston, USA.