Archer, Louise and Osborne, Jonathan
(2018).
Science aspirations and career choice: Age 10-14.
[Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex:
Economic and Social Research Council.
10.5255/UKDA-SN-851148
Data description (abstract)
There is now considerable evidence that children's attitudes to school science in the UK begin to decline from year age 10 onwards. Moreover, by age 14, the majority of students have broadly determined their future career path. Using a 5-year longitudinal study, with a random stratified cohort of 6000 children from the age of 10 to 14, and a subset of 60 students for a detailed qualitative study, the following three questions will be explored: How are student educational and occupational aspirations formed over time?How are these aspirations influenced by their peers, parents and their experience of school science? How are these aspirations shaped by their gender, class and ethnic identities? An additional hypothesis is that students are choosing not to study science because they are ill-informed at the initial point of subject choice (age 14) of the careers offered, both in science and from science, by the study of science and mathematics.Therefore, a research-informed intervention will be developed, in collaboration with teachers and external experts, to teach about science-based careers in KS3. Its effect on career aspirations will be studied and evaluated using data draw from lesson observations and from students.
Data creators: |
Creator Name |
Affiliation |
ORCID (as URL) |
Archer Louise |
King's College London |
|
Osborne Jonathan |
King's College London |
|
|
Contributors: |
Name |
Affiliation |
ORCID (as URL) |
Osborne Jonathan |
King's College London |
|
|
Sponsors: |
Economic and Social Research Council
|
Grant reference: |
RES-179-25-0008
|
Topic classification: |
Education
|
Keywords: |
science, aspiration, students (school), school children, career, science education
|
Date published: |
16 Dec 2013 12:01
|
Last modified: |
16 Aug 2018 08:55
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Collection period: |
Date from: | Date to: |
---|
5 January 2009 | 4 January 2014 |
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Country: |
United Kingdom |
Data collection method: |
Interviews, online surveys, focus groups |
Observation unit: |
Group, Individual |
Kind of data: |
Numeric |
Type of data: |
Qualitative and mixed methods data |
Resource language: |
English |
|
Data sourcing, processing and preparation: |
Interviews and surveys
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Rights owners: |
Name |
Affiliation |
ORCID (as URL) |
Archer Louise |
King's College London |
|
Willis Beatrice |
|
|
|
Contact: |
Name | Email | Affiliation | ORCID (as URL) |
---|
Archer, Louise | louise.archer@kcl.ac.uk | King's College London | Unspecified |
|
Notes on access: |
The Data Collection is available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access.
|
Publisher: |
Economic and Social Research Council
|
Last modified: |
16 Aug 2018 08:55
|
|
Available Files
Documentation
Publications
Science-related Aspirations Across the Primary–Secondary Divide: Evidence from two surveys in England |
‘It didn’t really change my opinion’: exploring what works, what doesn’t and why in a school science, technology, engineering and mathematics careers intervention |
Adolescent boys' science aspirations: Masculinity, capital, and power |
Nerdy, Brainy and Normal: Children’s and Parents’ Constructions of Those Who Are Highly Engaged with Science |
Spheres of Influence: What shapes young people’s aspirations at age 12/13 and what are the implications for education policy? |
Not Girly, not sexy, not glamorous: Primary school girls' and parents' constructions of science aspirations. |
“Balancing acts'': Elementary school girls' negotiations of femininity, achievement, and science |
Science Aspirations and family habitus: How families shape children’s engagement and identification with science. |
Identifying with Science: A case study of two 13-year-old 'high achieving working class' British Asian girls. |
High aspirations but low progression: The science aspirations careers paradox amongst minority ethnic students. |
Young Children's Aspirations in Science: The unequivocal, the uncertain and the unthinkable |
“Doing” science versus “being” a scientist: Examining 10/11-year-old schoolchildren's constructions of science through the lens of identity |
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