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Friendship group characteristics, motivation, and gender were investigated in relation to adolescents' science, technology, engineering, and math ( STEM ) career interest. The sample was comprised of 468 high school students ( M = 16 years, range = 13–18) from diverse ethnic backgrounds. Participants rated their friendship group's support of STEM as well as their personal motivation in science. They separately rated the friendship group's support of E nglish and personal motivation in E nglish. Other predictors included friendship group characteristics (importance, gender composition) and background variables such as gender. Group support of STEM (but not E nglish) and science motivation (but not E nglish motivation) predicted STEM career interest. Group characteristics and participant gender moderated the effects. Findings suggest social identities and self‐concepts may shape youths' STEM career choices.
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Rachael D. Robnett
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Campbell Leaper
University of California, Santa Cruz
Journal of Research on Adolescence
University of California, Santa Cruz
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Robnett et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd5988015782f43c50ae59 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/jora.12013