Stepping Out and Stepping Up: Narratives of Women of Color in an Urban OST STEM Program
Katie Mathew, PhD
Kimberly Sterin, PhD
Augue Mae Manongsong, PhD
Ayanna Allen-Handy, PhD
Jacqueline Genovesi, PhD
Kim Godfrey
Dominique Thomas
Janae Keita
Ian Marcus, PhD
Nancy Peter, EdD
Hilary Blecker, MPH
Sharon Walker, PhD
The science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields have a well-documented racialized and gendered participation gap between males, particularly white males, and women of color (WOC). Through a Critical Race Feminist lens, this qualitative research study uses lifestory narrative analysis to understand the experiences of eleven WOC who participated in an urban STEM-focused out-of-school time (OST) program. Data analysis showed students story their experiences around three overarching themes: (1) Experiencing New Opportunities; (2) Cultivating Supportive Relationships; and (3) Expanding STEM Career Possibilities. Findings indicate that an urban STEM-focused OST program can activate an ecosystem of opportunities and support which can empower WOC to step out of their socialized comfort zones and step up to more advanced academic and career paths. Participant narratives demonstrate how their experiences in a particular urban STEM OST program opened doors and encouraged pathways otherwise historically made inaccessible to WOC in STEM fields.
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