Characterizing the Socialization of STEM Graduate Students Using the Context of the McNair Scholars Program

Background: Despite the increase in studies examining STEM doctoral student persistence and attrition, there is still an incomplete understanding of the factors contributing to a student’s successful transition into and through graduate education. As STEM programs seek to become more diverse and inc...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kanembe Shanachilubwa, Catherine Berdanier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: VT Publishing 2025-07-01
Series:Studies in Engineering Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://account.seejournal.org/index.php/vt-j-see/article/view/181
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849230053885345792
author Kanembe Shanachilubwa
Catherine Berdanier
author_facet Kanembe Shanachilubwa
Catherine Berdanier
author_sort Kanembe Shanachilubwa
collection DOAJ
description Background: Despite the increase in studies examining STEM doctoral student persistence and attrition, there is still an incomplete understanding of the factors contributing to a student’s successful transition into and through graduate education. As STEM programs seek to become more diverse and inclusive, understanding how to support students best as they consider graduate education is imperative. One of the most successful federal programs in preparing and graduating PhD students in STEM disciplines has been the McNair Scholars Program; however, while its quantitative success has been documented, relatively little qualitative research has been done to understand the benefits conferred to students who went through the program. As such, the McNair Program constitutes the ideal proxy to examine how intentional schema development can impact graduate student socialization. Purpose/Hypothesis: This article aims to characterize STEM graduate student socialization using the McNair Scholars Program, a federally funded TRIO program, as the context of the study. Schema Theory and Bourdieu’s theory of social capital provided conceptual models to understand how and why these students developed strategies for success. Design/Method: Data was collected in a qualitative research design through semi-structured interviews with N = 13 participants. A thematic analysis was conducted on the data using an emergent coding schema informed by schema theory and social capital theory. Results: Our findings uncovered five themes related to how the presence, absence, or development of five different forms of capital: technical, cultural, economic, social, and intrapersonal impacted the experiences of the graduate students interviewed. Conclusions: Development of the five forms of capital and the cultivation of individual habitus is critical for the preparation of students for graduate education particularly for first-generation low-income and underrepresented students.
format Article
id doaj-art-ec9c37ef35dd4170902b796b9dda73e0
institution Kabale University
issn 2690-5450
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher VT Publishing
record_format Article
series Studies in Engineering Education
spelling doaj-art-ec9c37ef35dd4170902b796b9dda73e02025-08-21T12:47:22ZengVT PublishingStudies in Engineering Education2690-54502025-07-0161152–174152–17410.21061/see.181165Characterizing the Socialization of STEM Graduate Students Using the Context of the McNair Scholars ProgramKanembe Shanachilubwa0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8903-7405Catherine Berdanier1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3271-4836Pennsylvania State UniversityPennsylvania State UniversityBackground: Despite the increase in studies examining STEM doctoral student persistence and attrition, there is still an incomplete understanding of the factors contributing to a student’s successful transition into and through graduate education. As STEM programs seek to become more diverse and inclusive, understanding how to support students best as they consider graduate education is imperative. One of the most successful federal programs in preparing and graduating PhD students in STEM disciplines has been the McNair Scholars Program; however, while its quantitative success has been documented, relatively little qualitative research has been done to understand the benefits conferred to students who went through the program. As such, the McNair Program constitutes the ideal proxy to examine how intentional schema development can impact graduate student socialization. Purpose/Hypothesis: This article aims to characterize STEM graduate student socialization using the McNair Scholars Program, a federally funded TRIO program, as the context of the study. Schema Theory and Bourdieu’s theory of social capital provided conceptual models to understand how and why these students developed strategies for success. Design/Method: Data was collected in a qualitative research design through semi-structured interviews with N = 13 participants. A thematic analysis was conducted on the data using an emergent coding schema informed by schema theory and social capital theory. Results: Our findings uncovered five themes related to how the presence, absence, or development of five different forms of capital: technical, cultural, economic, social, and intrapersonal impacted the experiences of the graduate students interviewed. Conclusions: Development of the five forms of capital and the cultivation of individual habitus is critical for the preparation of students for graduate education particularly for first-generation low-income and underrepresented students.https://account.seejournal.org/index.php/vt-j-see/article/view/181graduate educationstem educationschema theorytheory of capitalmcnair
spellingShingle Kanembe Shanachilubwa
Catherine Berdanier
Characterizing the Socialization of STEM Graduate Students Using the Context of the McNair Scholars Program
Studies in Engineering Education
graduate education
stem education
schema theory
theory of capital
mcnair
title Characterizing the Socialization of STEM Graduate Students Using the Context of the McNair Scholars Program
title_full Characterizing the Socialization of STEM Graduate Students Using the Context of the McNair Scholars Program
title_fullStr Characterizing the Socialization of STEM Graduate Students Using the Context of the McNair Scholars Program
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing the Socialization of STEM Graduate Students Using the Context of the McNair Scholars Program
title_short Characterizing the Socialization of STEM Graduate Students Using the Context of the McNair Scholars Program
title_sort characterizing the socialization of stem graduate students using the context of the mcnair scholars program
topic graduate education
stem education
schema theory
theory of capital
mcnair
url https://account.seejournal.org/index.php/vt-j-see/article/view/181
work_keys_str_mv AT kanembeshanachilubwa characterizingthesocializationofstemgraduatestudentsusingthecontextofthemcnairscholarsprogram
AT catherineberdanier characterizingthesocializationofstemgraduatestudentsusingthecontextofthemcnairscholarsprogram