16–20 Aug 2021
University of Glasgow (virtual)
Europe/London timezone

Contributed talk: The relationship between a sense of belonging and well-being in male and female undergraduate physics students

20 Aug 2021, 11:15
15m
University of Glasgow (virtual)

University of Glasgow (virtual)

Speaker

Ewan Bottomley (University of St. Andrews)

Description

Coined ‘the social cure’, a strong sense of social support has been associated with greater health and well-being (Jetten, Haslam, & Alexander, 2012). However, recent research has suggested that women in physics undergraduate degrees report a lesser sense of belonging on their course, com- pared to men (Seyranian et al., 2018). Consequentially, we hypothesised that, as they are an under- represented group, women in university physics classes may report a lower sense of belonging and well-being, in comparison to men. Similarly, we posited that the link between belonging as part of the physics community and well-being would be weaker for women than it would be for men. We conducted a survey of 310 physics students (105 women, 205 men) from across all undergrad- uate levels at a small research-intensive university. This survey measured students’ identification with physics as a discipline, their sense of belonging, their self-efficacy (the beliefs in their abil- ity to complete physics tasks), and their sense of well-being. Our results revealed that women reported a similar level of belonging and well-being compared to men, but men reported signifi- cantly greater physics identity and self-efficacy than women. Despite this, belonging significantly predicted levels of well-being for men, but this association was not found for women. Therefore, it seems men could be benefitting from the social cure to a greater extent than women in physics. This raises a number of questions for future research: what contexts result in belonging relating to well-being, and is the lack of an association between belonging and well-being prevalent in other under-represented groups in education?

References

Jetten, J., Haslam, C., & Alexander, S. H. (Eds.). (2012). The social cure: Identity, health and well- being. Psychology press.

Seyranian, V., Madva, A., Duong, N., Abramzon, N., Tibbetts, Y., & Harackiewicz, J. M. (2018). The longitudinal effects of STEM identity and gender on flourishing and achievement in college physics. International Journal of STEM Education, 5(1), 1-14.

Key words belonging, well-being, gender, self-efficacy, identity
Region UK/Ireland

Primary authors

Antje Kohnle (University of St. Andrews) Ewan Bottomley (University of St. Andrews) Kenneth Mavor (University of St. Andrews) Paula Miles (University of St. Andrews) Vivienne Wild (University of St. Andrews)

Presentation materials