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High School Students’ Motivations and Views of Agriculture and Agricultural Careers upon Completion of a Pre- College Program Kaylie Scherer April 28,

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Presentation on theme: "High School Students’ Motivations and Views of Agriculture and Agricultural Careers upon Completion of a Pre- College Program Kaylie Scherer April 28,"— Presentation transcript:

1 High School Students’ Motivations and Views of Agriculture and Agricultural Careers upon Completion of a Pre- College Program Kaylie Scherer April 28, 2016 1

2 Introduction Expose students to careers & degrees in agriculture Strengthen the STEM pipeline to support student recruitment Increase the number, participation, & success of underrepresented minorities Pre-College Programs Determine if pre-college programs are having the intended effect Assessment strategies 2

3 Summer residential programs that bring high school students to campus for: career exploration academic preparation skill building social relationship & networking Pre-College Programs 3

4 Purpose Pilot a common assessment tool and explore and describe the outcomes of 2 separate pre-college programs: Molecular Agriculture Summer Institute (MASI) Purdue Agribusiness Science Academy (PASA) And participating high school students’: Motivation to engage in the program and activities Agricultural career interests Views of agriculture Future educational aspirations 4

5 Research Questions 1. To what extent where students in the two pre-college programs motivated to engage in the pre-college programs and activities? 2. To what extent where students in the two pre-college programs interested in agricultural careers before and after the pre-college programs? 3. What were students’ views of agriculture before and after the participating in the pre-college programs? 4. What were students’ future educational aspirations six to eight months after participating in the pre-college programs? 5

6 Literature Review Higher awareness of agriculture one year after the program (Ortega, 2011) Positive effect on science career interest (Markowitz 2004) Increased understanding of food, agriculture, & natural resources (Foster & Savala, 2012) Non-agriculture students had increase in self-efficacy & career interest in agriculture (Settle et al, 2012) 6

7 Racial and Ethnic Minorities in STEM Model (REM STEM) Museus et al., 2011 7

8 8 Racial and Ethnic Minorities in STEM Model (REM STEM) Early exposure to STEM careers Early dispositions toward STEM (Interest, self-efficacy, aspirations, expectations

9 Demographics & Personal Characteristics Interest in Agricultural Careers Views of Agriculture Early exposure to Agriculture -Pre-college Experience Disposition Toward Agriculture -Views -Interest Future Educational Aspirations -Intention to apply Career Choice Operationalized REM STEM Model 9

10 Theoretical Framework Self-determination theory (Deci and Ryan, 1985) Identifies autonomy, competence, and relatedness as factors influencing motivation Informed the Intrinsic Motivation Inventory, which measures: Interest/enjoyment Value/usefulness Perceived competence Importance/effort 10

11 Research Design Exploratory, descriptive study Limited ability to make causal conclusions Mixed methods Sequential mixed model Quantitatively driven with qualitative support Data collection instruments: Questionnaires – quan. Interviews- quan. & qual. Variables: Motivation to engage in the programs Agricultural career interests Views of agriculture 11

12 Participants 13 high school students from the 2015 Molecular Agriculture Summer Institute (MASI) 26 high school students from the 2015 Purdue Agribusiness Science Academy (PASA) Selection based on: Length: 1 week or longer Audience: high school students 12

13 Purdue Agribusiness Science Academy (PASA) High School Summer Institute Students 27 students (26 participated in study) Grades 10, 11, 12 Underrepresented minorities Program 2 weeks Exploratory 3 academic tracks Molecular Agriculture Summer Institute (MASI) Students 13 students Grades 11 &12 Program 1 week Lab-based 4 lab groups Academic preparation Career exploration Social relationship building Skill building 13

14 Data Collection Timeline Pre-College Program Youth Questionnaire Pretest Pre-College Program Youth Questionnaire Posttest Follow-Up Phone Interview Beginning of the Pre-College Program End of the Pre-College Program 6-8 Months After the Pre-College Program 14

15 Pre-College Program Youth Questionnaire Pretest Agricultural Career Interests Posttest Views of Agriculture Agricultural Career Interests Views of Agriculture Motivation to Engage in the Pre-College Program 15

16 Pre-College Program Youth Questionnaire 16

17 Pre-College Program Youth Questionnaire 17

18 Pre-College Program Youth Questionnaire Did it engage & create interest? 18

19 Instrument Validity & Reliability Items adapted from other instruments Expert panels Pilot tested Factor Analysis Cronbach’s alpha post-hoc reliability coefficients Determined whether questionnaire components were reliable within the datasets Motivation.83 Agricultural Career pretest =.70; posttest =.52 Views of Agriculture pretest =.88; posttest =.95 19

20 Follow-Up Phone Interviews 7 Questions 2 Questions 3 Questions Reflect on Experience Agricultural Career Interests Future Educational Aspirations Views of Agriculture 7 MASI students 10 PASA students 20

21 Conclusion 1 Students reported that they were motivated to engage in the pre-college programs and activities. 1 = none/not at all, 2 = a little, 3 = somewhat, 4 = a lot, 5 = absolutely 21

22 Conclusion 2 Students reported higher agricultural career interests after the pre-college programs 1 = none/not at all, 2 = a little, 3 = somewhat, 4 = a lot, 5 = absolutely 22

23 Conclusion 3 Students described more positive views of agriculture after the pre-college programs 1 = none/not at all, 2 = a little, 3 = somewhat, 4 = a lot, 5 = absolutely 23

24 Conclusion 4 Future Educational Aspirations 6-8 Months After the Pre-College Programs 100% attend a 4-year university 100% definitely will apply to Purdue or already applied to Purdue 100% would consider a career in agriculture MASI PASA 70% attend a 4-year university 70% probably will apply to Purdue, definitely will apply to Purdue, or already applied to Purdue 70% would consider a career in agriculture 24

25 Implications for Practice Program Design Opportunities to see how careers in agriculture combine science and working with people Pilot test of Pre-College Program Youth Questionnaire Further work on a common assessment to help provide descriptive impact of programs across the college 25

26 Recommendations for Future Research Increasing Programs and Participants Greater generalizability Increased construct validity of the instrument through factor analysis Pre-College Program Design Examining the pre-college programs at this level of lab groups/ academic track groups Programs of differing lengths Research Design More longitudinal data Other factors, including parents, teachers, friends, guidance counselors, and mentors Other items within the 7 constructs of the Racial and Ethnic Minorities in STEM Model 26

27 Acknowledgements Committee members- Dr. Knobloch, Dr. Dotterer, and Dr. Joly MASI and PASA program coordinators- Amy Jones and Myron McClure 27


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