Physical Review Physics Education Research (May 2020)

Group roles in unstructured labs show inequitable gender divide

  • Katherine N. Quinn,
  • Michelle M. Kelley,
  • Kathryn L. McGill,
  • Emily M. Smith,
  • Zachary Whipps,
  • N. G. Holmes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.16.010129
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
p. 010129

Abstract

Read online Read online

Instructional labs are being transformed to better reflect authentic scientific practice, often by removing aspects of pedagogical structure to support student agency and decision making. We explored how these changes impact men’s and women’s participation in group work associated with labs through clustering methods on the quantified behavior of students. We compared the group roles students take on in two different types of instructional settings: (i) highly structured traditional labs, and (ii) less structured inquiry-based labs. Students working in groups in the inquiry-based (less structured) labs assumed different roles within their groups, however men and women systematically took on different roles and men behaved differently when in single- versus mixed-gender groups. We found no such systematic differences in role division among male and female students in the traditional (highly structured) labs. Students in the inquiry-based labs were not overtly assigned these roles, indicating that the inequitable division of roles was not a result of explicit assignment. Our results highlight the importance of structuring equitable group dynamics in educational settings, as a gendered division of roles can emerge without active intervention. As the culture in physics evolves to remove systematic gender biases in the field, instructors in educational settings must not only remove explicitly biased aspects of curricula but also take active steps to ensure that potentially discriminatory aspects are not inadvertently reinforced.