Who works in STEM? How degree field of study, gender, and parental occupation shape graduates’ likelihood of working in STEM

This thesis explores the broad question of ‘who works in STEM?’ by investigating aspects of two domains: the role of higher education, which is examined by looking at the gendered association between degree field of study and field of occupation (‘horizontal education-job matches’), and the role of...

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Main Author: Steinberg, IKD
Other Authors: Bukodi, E
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
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author Steinberg, IKD
author2 Bukodi, E
author_facet Bukodi, E
Steinberg, IKD
author_sort Steinberg, IKD
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description This thesis explores the broad question of ‘who works in STEM?’ by investigating aspects of two domains: the role of higher education, which is examined by looking at the gendered association between degree field of study and field of occupation (‘horizontal education-job matches’), and the role of social origin, specifically the association between parental STEM occupation and own STEM occupation (‘occupational inheritance'). Possible mediators of these associations are considered throughout. The thesis makes several contributions to the literature, the most notable being (i) its focus on taking a work life course perspective, which continues to be relatively scarce both in the study of horizontal education-job matches and in the study of occupational inheritance, and (ii) its exploration of the role of social origin as a determinant of STEM work. The thesis takes a quantitative approach and explores the research questions through logistic cross-sectional and panel regressions using data from the 1970 British Cohort Study (BCS70). Firstly, examining the role of higher education, I demonstrate that gender plays an important role in shaping horizontal education-job matches in what I call ‘Core STEM’ fields (computer science and IT, engineering, mathematics, and the physical sciences), with women being less likely to ‘benefit’ from their STEM degree. This pattern persists, and even strengthens, over the work life course. However, despite being important in shaping graduates’ likelihood of working in STEM, degree field of study and gender cannot explain a considerable proportion of the variance in graduates’ likelihood of being found in STEM work. Hence, secondly, I turn to the role of social origin and show that occupational inheritance plays an important role in determining whether graduates work in STEM. Those with a ‘STEM parent’ are substantially more likely to enter STEM at labour market entry but are also more likely to leave STEM over the work life course.
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spelling oxford-uuid:6c4b7eaf-4cf5-444a-9337-22d29f41da042024-11-28T12:17:51ZWho works in STEM? How degree field of study, gender, and parental occupation shape graduates’ likelihood of working in STEM Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:6c4b7eaf-4cf5-444a-9337-22d29f41da04Graduate students in scienceSchool-to-work transitionSocial mobility--Great BritainWomen graduate studentsEnglishHyrax Deposit2024Steinberg, IKDBukodi, EThis thesis explores the broad question of ‘who works in STEM?’ by investigating aspects of two domains: the role of higher education, which is examined by looking at the gendered association between degree field of study and field of occupation (‘horizontal education-job matches’), and the role of social origin, specifically the association between parental STEM occupation and own STEM occupation (‘occupational inheritance'). Possible mediators of these associations are considered throughout. The thesis makes several contributions to the literature, the most notable being (i) its focus on taking a work life course perspective, which continues to be relatively scarce both in the study of horizontal education-job matches and in the study of occupational inheritance, and (ii) its exploration of the role of social origin as a determinant of STEM work. The thesis takes a quantitative approach and explores the research questions through logistic cross-sectional and panel regressions using data from the 1970 British Cohort Study (BCS70). Firstly, examining the role of higher education, I demonstrate that gender plays an important role in shaping horizontal education-job matches in what I call ‘Core STEM’ fields (computer science and IT, engineering, mathematics, and the physical sciences), with women being less likely to ‘benefit’ from their STEM degree. This pattern persists, and even strengthens, over the work life course. However, despite being important in shaping graduates’ likelihood of working in STEM, degree field of study and gender cannot explain a considerable proportion of the variance in graduates’ likelihood of being found in STEM work. Hence, secondly, I turn to the role of social origin and show that occupational inheritance plays an important role in determining whether graduates work in STEM. Those with a ‘STEM parent’ are substantially more likely to enter STEM at labour market entry but are also more likely to leave STEM over the work life course.
spellingShingle Graduate students in science
School-to-work transition
Social mobility--Great Britain
Women graduate students
Steinberg, IKD
Who works in STEM? How degree field of study, gender, and parental occupation shape graduates’ likelihood of working in STEM
title Who works in STEM? How degree field of study, gender, and parental occupation shape graduates’ likelihood of working in STEM
title_full Who works in STEM? How degree field of study, gender, and parental occupation shape graduates’ likelihood of working in STEM
title_fullStr Who works in STEM? How degree field of study, gender, and parental occupation shape graduates’ likelihood of working in STEM
title_full_unstemmed Who works in STEM? How degree field of study, gender, and parental occupation shape graduates’ likelihood of working in STEM
title_short Who works in STEM? How degree field of study, gender, and parental occupation shape graduates’ likelihood of working in STEM
title_sort who works in stem how degree field of study gender and parental occupation shape graduates likelihood of working in stem
topic Graduate students in science
School-to-work transition
Social mobility--Great Britain
Women graduate students
work_keys_str_mv AT steinbergikd whoworksinstemhowdegreefieldofstudygenderandparentaloccupationshapegraduateslikelihoodofworkinginstem