Malleability in communal goals and beliefs influences attraction to stem careers: Evidence for a goal congruity perspective.
Adult
Male
Stereotyping
Technology
Adolescent
Career Choice
Science
05 social sciences
Young Adult
Engineering
Sex Factors
Social Perception
5. Gender equality
Workforce
Humans
Female
10. No inequality
Goals
0503 education
Mathematics
DOI:
10.1037/a0025199
Publication Date:
2011-08-22T17:08:59Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
The goal congruity perspective posits that 2 distinct social cognitions predict attraction to science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (STEM) fields. First, individuals may particularly value communal goals (e.g., working with or helping others), due to either chronic individual differences or the salience of these goals in particular contexts. Second, individuals hold beliefs about the activities that facilitate or impede these goals, or goal affordance stereotypes. Women's tendency to endorse communal goals more highly than do men, along with consensual stereotypes that STEM careers impede communal goals, intersect to produce disinterest in STEM careers. We provide evidence for the foundational predictions that gender differences emerge primarily on communal rather than agentic goals (Studies 1a and 3) and that goal affordance stereotypes reflect beliefs that STEM careers are relatively dissociated from communal goals (Studies 1b and 1c). Most critically, we provide causal evidence that activated communal goals decrease interest in STEM fields (Study 2) and that the potential for a STEM career to afford communal goals elicits greater positivity (Study 3). These studies thus provide a novel demonstration that understanding communal goals and goal affordance stereotypes can lend insight into attitudes toward STEM pursuits.
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