Studies show that having a diverse academic faculty benefit students, who see themselves and their career aspirations represented, and leads to better student outcomes in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) programs. Studies repeatedly show that students have better outcomes, including persisting in STEM and graduating, when there is faculty diversity. While most faculty members and administrative leaders are White, students look to professors from diverse backgrounds as role models and mentors. As such, faculty diversity is key to student success.
The absence of faculty diversity in STEM, therefore, has broader implications, as it discourages many students of color from pursuing STEM degrees and careers. This can potentially have negative consequences for both the students themselves and society. Rapid expansion and advancements in STEM over the last several decades have led to a heightened demand for STEM professionals, who tend to earn higher salaries (STEM, $77,400; non-STEM, $46,900).
Additionally, the U.S. Department of Labor projects that STEM jobs will increase by nearly twice the rate of other jobs in the next 10 years. Between 2010 and 2018, the number of bachelor’s degrees granted in STEM subjects surged 62%, which is more than three times greater than the 20% rise in all bachelor’s degrees awarded over that same period.
Yet, despite the strong interest and higher pay in STEM careers, vast disparities in attainment by race, ethnicity, and gender persist in STEM education and employment, thereby limiting access and opportunities for social and economic mobility for some — particularly women and people of color. Women, and especially women of color, also fare worse in STEM jobs, as many are paid less than their male counterparts. Often, women need more degrees and, consequently, take out more loans to generate an income that is comparable to that of their male colleagues. We recognize that achieving STEM equity in degree attainment and in the workplace is interconnected with other systems and structures.
Students from marginalized groups, especially women, still have less access to AP STEM courses in high school and lower STEM degree attainment rates than their White male colleagues. Moreover, a significant number of STEM graduates of color come out of a small number of colleges and universities with diverse faculties; HBCUs, for example, produce 25% of all Black graduates in STEM fields.
How equitable are current STEM pathways?
Women, especially women of color, hold only a small minority of STEM jobs. It is also important to note that STEM degree attainment and jobs vary by field. For example, women and people of color are underrepresented in higher-paying STEM jobs, such as engineering and computing; whereas they have significantly more representation in the biological and behavioral sciences. Women are also more likely to leave STEM occupations. Black and Latino STEM students and professionals, particularly women, routinely face harassment, workplace discrimination, and unequal pay. So, it’s not surprising that Black and Latino STEM workers are underrepresented in the labor market. Black people comprise 11% of all workers but only 9% of STEM workers, while Latinos comprise 17% of the total workforce but hold only 8% of STEM jobs.
To better understand STEM attainment for women of color in the last decade, we used publicly available data from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) to compare STEM degree attainment with overall degree attainment trends from 2010-2019 (1). We focused on doctoral degree attainment, as this is highly correlated with both faculty careers and careers in research and development (R&D).
In our findings, we centered the experiences of Black and Latina women in STEM, as they face a “double-bind” and have been excluded from STEM spaces. Despite this exclusion, we recognize that Black and Latina women engage in STEM work and have contributed significantly to STEM innovations, which often receive little recognition. By identifying and addressing a need for increased support for women of color in STEM, we can provide a path for more equitable opportunities and outcomes.
Key Findings
In our analysis of STEM attainment rates by race/ethnicity and gender, (2) we found that there are still persistent inequities in STEM degree attainment for people of color, women, and women of color. We also found that increases in STEM doctoral degrees are not proportional to the rate at which women earn doctoral degrees generally. In all cases, women outpace men in earning associate, bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees; but in STEM, men within the same race or ethnicity have surpassed women for the last 10 years. Our data suggests that women of color face compounding challenges in STEM pathways.
While no single key finding summarizes the experiences of the individuals whose identities and academic careers are represented in this sample, we have identified several broad trends:
- STEM degree attainment gaps by gender have persisted over the last 10 years.
- In every racial/ethnic group, women outpace men in overall degree attainment; however, when solely looking at STEM degrees, men outpace women (Black men, 14.3%; Black women, 9.2%: Latino men, 26.3%; Latina women, 13.9%).