“Girls Hold All the Power in the World”: Cultivating Sisterhood and a Counterspace to Support STEM Learning with Black Girls
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What role do Black women STEM teachers play in the STEM learning experiences of Black girls?
- How do Black girls engage in and respond to a culturally relevant single-gender afterschool STEM program?
2. Conceptual Framework
- Academic success: This refers to the primary goal of helping all students achieve academic excellence. Teachers who use CRP should focus on providing rigorous, engaging, and relevant content that meets the needs and interests of diverse learners.
- Cultural competence: Teachers should work to develop their understanding of different cultural backgrounds, recognizing the value of students’ home cultures and integrating them into the curriculum. This component emphasizes the importance of building students’ cultural pride and fostering a sense of belonging in the classroom.
- Sociopolitical consciousness: CRP encourages teachers to help students develop a critical understanding of the social and political issues affecting their communities. This component aims to empower students to become agents of change, addressing issues of social justice and equity.
3. Black Girls and STEM Educational Learning Experiences
4. Advancing STEM Opportunity in a Middle School Context
4.1. The Participants
4.2. The SISTERHOOD I AM STEM Curriculum
5. Methodology
6. Findings
6.1. The Significance of the Single-Gender Environment and Black Women Teachers Cultivating Safe Spaces for STEM Learning
I think I have anxiety… [I’m worried about] how they will judge me to see how I look. [Other students] might say, “oh, she’s too fat,” or “oh, she was ugly,” but I had the courage to just turn my camera on sometimes [during SISTERHOOD] and it was just okay.
At first [SISTERHOOD] was kind of scary cause I didn’t know the girls. They was in a higher grade, like [another girl] was in a higher grade. Until I got to know the girls, then I got comfortable. [It was different from my regular science classes] Because some boys are childish and some don’t listen, but also some girls are childish and other girls don’t listen. [In SISTERHOOD] they wasn’t childish and they wasn’t no drama girls. [Drama girls] get you in trouble. They get you suspended. And you can get in fights and stuff and get in arguments. Because it’s certain things they say, you can try and not pay attention, but if they get to the point where you want them to stop, you’re going to [have to] say something and you’re going to get in trouble…[Drama girls] used to do it all the time in class and the teacher would have to stop teaching us so she can get them, and it stops our learning. [But, in SISTERHOOD] It was fun. No drama, no arguing, none of that. It was just all girls having fun.
I liked [the program] because it was no boys in there. Because some boys they, when they’re being all rowdy, they judge people because sometimes we don’t know what to do and they’ll be making jokes about us. That’s how it is at [this school].
I think that it was special that it was all girls on one group. And that it was part of something. It was something different. Like different from other stuff. It was like, this is all girls. Just learning about one thing together. [It was special because], you know, it doesn’t happen a lot. Not a lot at school, just having girls, well not a lot of girls, in one group together just learning interesting stuff. I ain’t never seen anything like it. Alright, but I’m not trying to shade the boys, but I feel like they’re more childish than girls. [They’re] Not taking most things seriously as other people or taking it as seriously as you want. I don’t think it affects [what I do in class] but they just add more difficulty.
The teachers [in the program] are cool, I really liked them because they helped me with a bunch of different things, especially [Ms. Baker]. She helped me when I was doing the projects, when I couldn’t get something right, she helped me with it. She helped me get through it, step-by-step. It’s different. My regular science teacher, she’ll give us the assignments and be like, if we need any questions, just ask her. With [Ms. Baker], with the projects I needed different things, and she got me through it step-by-step.
I actually love [Ms. Robins] because she’s like really funny and she helps me do my work, even though I really don’t even feel like it. It’s really awesome how she handles kids and works with them. She describes things easier. Yeah, she’s actually one of my favorite teachers. The other teachers, they don’t really help…They really don’t even help. They just describe it in a way that they were told to and they just continue on with the work. I mean, my science teacher helps a little, but yes.
My impression was they were new, just new, just learning. They passed science, but most of the girls have not had science consistently. They don’t get it consistently in elementary. And so, I feel like facilitating as a facilitator for the program and just seeing their reaction to doing the various activities that we did, their foundations. If they have stronger foundations, then their confidence levels will be higher. They wouldn’t be as apprehensive about responding or sharing their knowledge because at the stage that they were with us, it’s like when you’re new, you’re in the new stages of learning something and you’re apprehensive about responding or giving your opinion or whatever because you’re unsure of the knowledge that you’re gaining.
And so, with them as I facilitated, [I wanted them to say] “I know it!” I’m not a gambler, but it’s their confidence levels because they have not had science and they don’t have the foundation, a strong foundation, [so] they doubt themselves. As opposed to saying, “I’m smart, I have the potential to do, and I have certain skills that I can use to acquire this knowledge.” And so, I think [the] lack of technical programs and STEM content that they should be getting at lower grades, it’s affecting them. It is. It’s affecting them to where they are not going to pursue. They’re not going to go to high school. They’re not going to take the hard chemistry class. They’re not going to want to take the physics class because the foundation and their confidence has not been built up at this level for them to know, “okay, I know I got this”. And they won’t, they don’t pursue the opportunities.
6.2. The HyFlex Model Fostering a Communal Experience for the Girls and Their Families
My little sister. She’s in the second grade. And she was so excited to do this stuff with me and I was like, girl chill…She did the plants with me. The plant is actually still outside still. [She did] the first project we did, or I think that was the first one. The marbles. Yeah, that was the first one. She did that one, the lip balm, and the plant one.
I’ve got a little sister, and she’s three. Every time I’m doing a program, she like, “Can I help you? Can I help you?” And when the teachers be talking, she’d be thinking the mic is on and she be trying to answer questions and everything.
My mom and my sister…By them watching me doing all the experiments and all the activities, and learning from it, and watching the videos and reading the articles. They learned some fun stuff. I don’t know exactly what, but I just know they did.
Some of the classes I was on FaceTime with [Ebony] and we would just talk about the program, like the lipbalm [experiment] we was on FaceTime and the DNA extract. I liked that one.
Well, it felt like [the program] went fast. I thought it was going to be way longer than it was. It was like it was faster than I expected. I even noticed how much stuff we was doing. Like every week I didn’t even notice it…when I looked in the box…it looked like it was so much more stuff, but then when I heard them say it’s two more meetings, I’m like, “two or three meetings?” Dang, I thought we just started the program.
6.3. Supporting Black Girls’ SELF-Visualization and STEM Confidence through SISTERHOOD I AM STEM
I think that science was really cool and that it’s just amazing how things actually work and seem, and it’s just like our world, basically. I think [I like science] much better [now]. The power that women can hold and the things that we can do is just amazing. And just don’t like give up on what you’re trying to do. This, I forgot her name, this astronaut woman, how she became the first [Black] woman to go to outer space. Yes, I was like, wow. The power she can hold is just amazing. I think that that meant for me, it encouraged me to know that I can do anything that I just put my mind and my heart to. And anything is possible. [The program] encouraged me to do more work and try to get A’s and B’s. And I actually got a little bit better [in school]. I just have two classes I have to work on. I don’t know. I just feel like I have all the powers to just put my mind to it and really focus on my work. And like, I don’t even know how to describe it. It just gave me courage.
[Science is] something I really like doing. So, if I have all the equipment then yeah, I’ll definitely be able to do it. [I’ve been thinking] that maybe later on in my life I could do the same things I did in the program and know more about it. The extracting DNA from a strawberry. Yeah, I did think about being that type of scientist.
I feel better about science. I learned more about engineering things. The only thing that really changed [after the program] is that I thought about it–being an engineer might be a good thing for me. Because you’re learning different things. You’re creating new things, you could make new things better. [Things] That already exist, but better. [The program] helped me a lot. I know it helped me a lot. It definitely got me more into science…Yeah it helped me with my career ideas. What I want to be when I grow up.
7. Discussion
8. Conclusions and Implications
8.1. Implications for Research
8.2. Implications for Practice
8.3. Implications for Policy
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pseudonym | Role | Grade | Age | Ethnic Identity | Gender |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aniyah | Student | 7th | 12 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Carmen | Student | 7th | 12 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Charity | Student | 7th | 13 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Clarisse | Student | 7th | 12 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Danielle | Student | 7th | 12 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Renee | Student | 7th | 12 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Alayah | Student | 8th | 13 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Ebony | Student | 8th | 13 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Nicole | Student | 8th | 13 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Paige | Student | 8th | 14 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Shaniyah | Student | 8th | 14 | African American | Cis-gender female |
Tattiana | Student | 8th | 13 | Afro Latina | Cis-gender female |
Ms. Baker | Science Teacher | 7th | n/a | African American | Cis-gender female |
Ms. Robins | Math Teacher | 8th | n/a | African American | Cis-gender female |
Total | N = 14 |
Have You Ever… | Yes | No | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Attended a science camp or special science program? | 16.67% n = 2 | 83.33% (n = 10) | |||
Taken an extra science class in the summer (not a make-up class)? | 0% (n = 0) | 100% (n = 12) | |||
Participated in a science fair? | 8.33% (n = 1) | 91.67% (n = 11) | |||
Participated in a science club or team? | 8.33% (n = 1) | 91.67% (n = 11) | |||
Received an award or special recognition for doing well in your science classes or other science-related activities (like a science fair, competition, etc.) | 33.33% (n = 4) | 66.67% (n = 8) | |||
Worked on a science project or experiment in a university or professional lab? | 33.33% (n = 4) | 66.67% (n = 8) | |||
Had a teacher who made it exciting to learn science? | 91.67% (n = 11) | 8.33% (n = 1) | |||
Had a teacher who made you dislike learning science? | 33.33% (n = 4) | 66.67% (n = 8) | |||
Strongly Agree | Somewhat Agree | Disagree Somewhat | Strongly Disagree | Does not Apply | |
My teachers, guidance counselor, and/or other adults at school encourage me to take science classes. | 8.33% (n = 1) | 41.67% (n = 5) | 8.33% (n = 1) | 8.33% (n = 1) | 33.33% (n = 4) |
I don’t like to do things I can’t master quickly. | 8.33% (n = 1) | 25.00% (n = 3) | 50.00% (n = 6) | 16.67% (n = 2) | |
If people tell me I can’t do something, it makes me try. | 41.67% (n = 5) | 41.67% (n = 5) | 0.00% (n = 0) | 16.67% (n = 2) | |
I enjoy trying to understand difficult things. | 27.27% (n = 3) | 54.55% (n = 6) | 9.09% (n = 1) | 9.09% (n = 1) |
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Share and Cite
Edwards, E.B.; King, N.S. “Girls Hold All the Power in the World”: Cultivating Sisterhood and a Counterspace to Support STEM Learning with Black Girls. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 698. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13070698
Edwards EB, King NS. “Girls Hold All the Power in the World”: Cultivating Sisterhood and a Counterspace to Support STEM Learning with Black Girls. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(7):698. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13070698
Chicago/Turabian StyleEdwards, Erica B., and Natalie S. King. 2023. "“Girls Hold All the Power in the World”: Cultivating Sisterhood and a Counterspace to Support STEM Learning with Black Girls" Education Sciences 13, no. 7: 698. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13070698
APA StyleEdwards, E. B., & King, N. S. (2023). “Girls Hold All the Power in the World”: Cultivating Sisterhood and a Counterspace to Support STEM Learning with Black Girls. Education Sciences, 13(7), 698. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13070698