Resilience is not enough for Black women in STEM: Counterstories of two young Black women becoming a STEM person

Both K‐12 schools and STEM disciplines are embedded in White supremacy and exclusion, making it that much harder for Black women to maintain an interest and sense of belonging in STEM. Through a Critical Race Feminism methodology, we tell the counterstories of our two co‐authors, two Black women, ov...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of research in science teaching 2024-04, Vol.61 (4), p.744-771
Hauptverfasser: Hughes, Roxanne, Ibourk, Amal, Wagner, Lauren, Jones, Kelli, Crawford, Samantha
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container_issue 4
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container_title Journal of research in science teaching
container_volume 61
creator Hughes, Roxanne
Ibourk, Amal
Wagner, Lauren
Jones, Kelli
Crawford, Samantha
description Both K‐12 schools and STEM disciplines are embedded in White supremacy and exclusion, making it that much harder for Black women to maintain an interest and sense of belonging in STEM. Through a Critical Race Feminism methodology, we tell the counterstories of our two co‐authors, two Black women, over the course of their lives. Through these counterstories (stories that run counter to normative stories of STEM as male and White), Kelli and Samantha show us how they negotiated and maintained a sense of belonging in STEM even through moments of self‐doubt in their STEM trajectory. These negotiations allowed them to carve a space for themselves within STEM. A key finding from these counterstories was the resilience both women developed through their participation in counterspaces and support from family and teachers that helped them develop pride in their STEM identity trajectories. Our study adds to the research on Black women's journeys in STEM by describing resilience strategies that our authors were forced to develop in response to White supremacy and how they were able to maintain their STEM identity by creating a counterstory that allowed them to maintain their sense of belonging within STEM. And yet, we conclude by asking if resilience is enough since both women questioned their authentic and valued place in their respective STEM disciplines because of the dominant storyline of STEM as White and male. Their stories reveal the deeper truth that change is needed in STEM to empower students of color to see themselves as not just tolerated but valued members of the discipline.
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source Wiley Journals; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Belonging
Black people
Black women
counterstories
critical race feminism
Females
Feminism
Identity
Minority groups
Race
Resilience
STEM identity
Student Empowerment
Teachers
Truth
White supremacy
Women
Women Scientists
title Resilience is not enough for Black women in STEM: Counterstories of two young Black women becoming a STEM person
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