Meredith Kier - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Meredith Kier

Research paper thumbnail of Examining the Effects of a STEM Career Video Intervention on the Interests and STEM Professional Identities of Rural, Minority Middle School Students

Research paper thumbnail of A design challenge requires students to create structures that can withstand a hurricane's effects

Research paper thumbnail of Albert Blanchard et al.JTATE 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Connecting Students to STEM Careers

Research paper thumbnail of Albert Blanchard et al.JTATE 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Supporting Teachers’ Technology Integration: A Descriptive Analysis of Social and Teaching Presence in Technical Support Sessions

Research paper thumbnail of The Development of the STEM Career Interest Survey (STEM-CIS)

Research in Science Education, 2014

Internationally, efforts to increase student interest in science, technology, engineering, and ma... more Internationally, efforts to increase student interest in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) careers have been on the rise. It is often the goal of such efforts that increased interest in STEM careers should stimulate economic growth and enhance innovation. Scientific and educational organizations recommend that efforts to interest students in STEM majors and careers begin at the middle school level, a time when students are developing their own interests and recognizing their academic strengths. These factors have led scholars to call for instruments that effectively measure interest in STEM classes and careers, particularly for middle school students. In response, we leveraged the social cognitive career theory to develop a survey with subscales in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. In this manuscript, we detail the six stages of development of the STEM Career Interest Survey. To investigate the instrument's reliability and psychometric properties, we administered this 44-item survey to over 1,000 middle school students (grades 6-8) who primarily were in rural, high-poverty districts in the southeastern USA. Confirmatory factor analyses indicate that the STEM-CIS is a strong, single factor instrument and also has four strong, discipline-specific subscales, which allow for the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics subscales to be administered separately or in Res Sci Educ combination. This instrument should prove helpful in research, evaluation, and professional development to measure STEM career interest in secondary level students.

Research paper thumbnail of Exploring the role of identity in elementary preservice teachers who plan to specialize in science teaching

Research paper thumbnail of Examining the Effects of a STEM Career Video Intervention on the Interests and STEM Professional Identities of Rural, Minority Middle School Students

Research paper thumbnail of A design challenge requires students to create structures that can withstand a hurricane's effects

Research paper thumbnail of Albert Blanchard et al.JTATE 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Connecting Students to STEM Careers

Research paper thumbnail of Albert Blanchard et al.JTATE 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Supporting Teachers’ Technology Integration: A Descriptive Analysis of Social and Teaching Presence in Technical Support Sessions

Research paper thumbnail of The Development of the STEM Career Interest Survey (STEM-CIS)

Research in Science Education, 2014

Internationally, efforts to increase student interest in science, technology, engineering, and ma... more Internationally, efforts to increase student interest in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) careers have been on the rise. It is often the goal of such efforts that increased interest in STEM careers should stimulate economic growth and enhance innovation. Scientific and educational organizations recommend that efforts to interest students in STEM majors and careers begin at the middle school level, a time when students are developing their own interests and recognizing their academic strengths. These factors have led scholars to call for instruments that effectively measure interest in STEM classes and careers, particularly for middle school students. In response, we leveraged the social cognitive career theory to develop a survey with subscales in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. In this manuscript, we detail the six stages of development of the STEM Career Interest Survey. To investigate the instrument's reliability and psychometric properties, we administered this 44-item survey to over 1,000 middle school students (grades 6-8) who primarily were in rural, high-poverty districts in the southeastern USA. Confirmatory factor analyses indicate that the STEM-CIS is a strong, single factor instrument and also has four strong, discipline-specific subscales, which allow for the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics subscales to be administered separately or in Res Sci Educ combination. This instrument should prove helpful in research, evaluation, and professional development to measure STEM career interest in secondary level students.

Research paper thumbnail of Exploring the role of identity in elementary preservice teachers who plan to specialize in science teaching