What Predicts Undergraduate Students’ Decision to Pursue a Career in Biomedical/Behavioral Research within an Upper-Division Research Training Program? A Study of Trainees’ Science Identity and Educational Outcomes

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46328/ijres.3238

Keywords:

Science identity, Undergraduate research, Biomedical research training, Diverse students

Abstract

This study examined how science identity and positive educational outcomes relate to student trainees’ decision to pursue a research career in health-related sciences, within the context of a two-year research training program that prepares diverse undergraduate students for a research career. In analyses using the evaluation data, science identity and one of the positive educational outcomes significantly predicted trainees’ decision to pursue a research career in biomedical and behavioral sciences. In general, students with stronger science identity and interest in pursuing research in academia exhibited a firmer decision to pursue a research career in sciences. In a separate analysis that examined the associations between the trainees’ decision to pursue a health-related research career and their underrepresented minority identities, gender, and disciplinary track, results revealed that: (1) the interaction between trainees’ disciplinary track (i.e., biomedical vs. behavioral sciences) and their underrepresented minority status was associated with their decision to pursue a research career, but (2) the gender x disciplinary track interaction was not. Emphasizing the need for supporting diverse undergraduate trainees to solidify their science identity and preparing them for a research career in academia, we discuss implications of our findings for research training programs with similar aims.

Author Biographies

Hiromi Masunaga, California State University, Long Beach

Professor, Department of Advanced Studies in Education and Counseling

Chi-Ah Chun, California State University, Long Beach

Professor, Department of Psychology

Kim-Phuong L. Vu, California State University, Long Beach

Professor, Department of Psychology

References

Masunaga, H., Chun, C. A., & Vu, K.P.L (2023). What predicts undergraduate students’ decision to pursue a career in biomedical/behavioral research within an upper-division research training program? A study of trainees’ science identity and educational outcomes. International Journal of Research in Education and Science (IJRES), 9(4), 920-936. https://doi.org/10.46328/ijres.3238

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Published

2023-11-02

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Abstracts