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Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara [email protected]

Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara [email protected]

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Page 1: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution?

Catherine WeinbergerUC Santa [email protected]

Page 2: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

“Individuals with the most potential for high academic achievement in mathematics and science . . . are generally considered to be those students who represent the top few centiles in ability, especially mathematics ability.”

Benbow and Arjmand (1992), Journal of Educational Psychology

“ . . . substantially fewer females than males . . . score in the upper tails of the mathematics and science ability distributions and hence are poised to succeed in the sciences.”

Hedges and Nowell (1995), Science

“ . . . if we wish to increase the proportion of women in the sciences, we must do something to change the underlying mathematical-attribute distribution.”

Paglin and Rufolo (1990), Journal of Labor Economics

Page 3: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 4: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Under this model:

• Important to recruit most of the capable individuals

• Efficiency requires attention to demographic composition

Page 5: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Under this alternative model:

• Less concern about efficiency, more concern about equity & diversity of perspectives

Page 6: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 7: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Data: Representative Samples of High School Seniors (1972 and 1980 cohorts)

Grade 12: Math Score (CTM)

6-7 years later: *Educational Attainment*College Major

Earlier Cohort Also Includes: *SAT-Math score *Labor Market Outcomes at Age 32

Page 8: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Definition:

EMS:*Engineering*Math*Computer Science *Chemistry*Physics*Astronomy

Focus on Bachelor’s College Graduates

Page 9: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

White WomenWhite Men

EMS BA

Rate

35 %

Page 10: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

.35

.35

Page 11: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

All College GraduatesProbability Distribution Functions

Page 12: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

EMS College GraduatesProbability Distribution Functions

1972 Women

50 75 Math Percentile

Page 13: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Result 1: Most white male EMS participants had 12th grade math scores

well below the “top few centiles”

50 75 Math Percentile

Page 14: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Using SAT-M scores instead:

Paglin and Rufolo (1990) suggest that EMS participants are drawn from the 651-800 range of SAT-Math scores.

Page 15: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Result 2: Less than one-third of white men in the EMS workforce have SAT-M scores above 650. (Table 3)

Page 16: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 17: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Are Lower Scoring Participants REALLY in the Science and Engineering Workforce?

Page 18: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Are Lower Scoring Participants REALLY in the Science and Engineering Workforce?

Hourly Earnings at Age 32

Math Score

Page 19: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 20: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Can This Model Be Saved?

Page 21: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 22: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 23: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 24: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 25: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Equation 4

Page 26: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 27: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Maximum Likelihood:

Given the observed data, what is the most likely combination of H and ?

Page 28: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

If is near 1, H will be near the 60th percentile:

If is small enough, H might be near the 90th percentile:

Maximum Likelihood:

Given the observed data, what is the most likely combination of H and ?

Page 29: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Maximum Likelihood:

Given the observed data, what is the most likely combination of H and ?

Result:

= .20 (quite a bit of unobserved ability)H is at the 78th percentile of the white male ability distribution.(Table 5, column 1)

Page 30: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 31: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Predicted EMS Participation:

Page 32: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu
Page 33: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu

Other Groups: Actual EMS Participation from Census & Survey of College Graduates Data,

Predictions from Base Year HSB Distributions(Preliminary Results)

Actual/Predicted

EMS Participation

Men

1980 cohort

Women

1980 cohort

White 1.1 .5

Hispanic 1.1 .6

Black 1.0 1.1

Asian 1.7 1.3

Page 34: Is the Science and Engineering Workforce Drawn from the Far Upper Tail of the Math Ability Distribution? Catherine Weinberger UC Santa Barbara weinberg@isber.ucsb.edu