First-Generation University Students Are At Greater Risk Of Experiencing Imposter Syndrome

Authored by digest.bps.org.uk and submitted by mvea
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Increasing efforts have been made in recent years to encourage students to pursue STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) subjects. There’s been a particularly positive emphasis on getting a more diverse group of people onto such courses: women, black and ethnic minority groups and working class people have all been the focus of drives and campaigns designed to help them enter STEM careers.

But, a new study suggests, the competitive nature of STEM courses may be having a knock-on effect on the confidence of certain students, in this case first-generation college attendees (those who are the first in their family to go to university). Such students, the paper argues, are more likely to experience “imposter syndrome” — the feeling that they don’t belong or don’t have the skills or intelligence to continue on their studies — precisely because of this atmosphere of competition.

In such environments, previous research has shown, students are more likely to compare themselves (often unfavourably) to others. When we feel our peers are our adversaries, rather than colleagues or comrades, we look to their successes and failures to judge ourselves: often, we believe we fall short, and our confidence falters.

In first-generation students, the paper argues, this can be even more damaging. First-generation students are often raised with communal values, relying on other people rather than seeing them as rivals. When this meets the competitive, individualistic world of STEM courses, it can have a particularly detrimental impact.

To study the impact of competition on first-generation college attendees, researchers enlisted 818 freshmen and sophomores enrolled in STEM courses at a large U.S. university. Participants were first asked to complete a survey, once at the beginning of term and once after the deadline to drop courses, measuring perceptions of classroom competition; participants rated statements such as “the professor seems to pit students against each other in a competitive manner in this class” on a scale of one to seven. Demographic data was also collected during these surveys, including information on whether participants were first-generation students.

Six weeks into term, students were sent further surveys to complete daily, asking whether or not they had been attending class. Those who had been attending were asked to explore imposter feelings, rating statements like “in class, I feel like people might find out I am not as capable as they think I am” on a scale of one to six; those who had not been attending were asked to explain why. The team also recorded how engaged students felt, how often they attended class, how much they thought about dropping out, and their grades.

As anticipated, those who felt classes were competitive were far more likely to feel as if they were an imposter, unable to keep up with the demands of their course. And compared to those with family members who had gone to university, first-generation students were more likely to experience feelings of imposter syndrome on a daily basis — but only in classes perceived to have high levels of competition. In non-competitive environments, imposter feelings were equal in both first-generation and continued generation students, suggesting that the atmosphere of the classroom really is a key driver.

By increasing their imposter feelings, the students’ perceptions of classroom competition also had a negative impact on their achievement, reducing engagement, attendance, and performance, and increasing dropout intentions. This effect was much greater amongst first-generation students

The team do note that repeatedly seeing questions about imposter syndrome may in fact have triggered those feelings: although measures were limited to once per day in the second part of the study, contemplating competition and achievement may in fact have enhanced feelings of insecurity or inadequacy.

How other identities intersect with the phenomenon was also left unaddressed. Women and people of colour are both more susceptible to imposter syndrome, for example, and exploring how such identities interact with one another could be a focus of future research.

Creating a welcoming, supportive environment for everybody to study STEM subjects, no matter their background, is key to a diverse and inclusive field. Understanding more about how students of different backgrounds experience STEM studies and actively developing strategies to counter inequalities are both vital steps towards making sure this happens.

– Feeling Like an Imposter: The Effect of Perceived Classroom Competition on the Daily Psychological Experiences of First-Generation College Students

Emily Reynolds (@rey_z) is a staff writer at BPS Research Digest

Zod_42 on January 9th, 2020 at 18:13 UTC »

I can relate. I dropped out of college. I taught myself web dev, and have been doing it for 15+ years. I still feel like an imposter sometimes, but hey, someone is willing to pay me. I think the key isn't what you learn in school, it's learning how to learn that keeps you relevant in my field.

SolidSnake_Foxhound on January 9th, 2020 at 16:28 UTC »

I can relate to this very strongly. My parents were immigrants, I'm of the first gen to go to college. I've often struggled with feelings of inadequacy and not belonging, even when I was praised or had a solid friend group. It's very interesting how classroom atmosphere is a key driver because I never felt that personally. My professors and classroom atmospheres seemed very collaborative and collegial, but I often felt not smart enough or not good enough to be close to people. Maybe that was the competitive thinking in me turned inward. It also reminds me of Carol Dweck's Growth Mindset, maybe I was clinging to an idea of myself being the smart guy because that's how my parents valued me and I was scared to have that sense of value challenged if all these other classmates saw that I wasn't that smart to their standards.

I thought depression had some effect, I was kind of depressed in my first year of university and it's hard for me to say if it's correlated with imposter feelings or caused it or vice versa, or if it's a vicious cycle. I have several first gen cousins who all dropped out of college because of depression and feelings of being lost (their words), but now I wonder if imposter syndrome better explains what they were feeling. Also, as a first gen I don't just belittle myself against my classmates but I also beat myself up mentally for not having the ingenuity and drive my parents have, so it's like competition with the idea of a glorified past, always forgetting that they had to learn along the way and people helped them too.

mvea on January 9th, 2020 at 13:45 UTC »

The post title is a copy and paste from the title and second paragraph of the linked psychology article here:

First-Generation University Students Are At Greater Risk Of Experiencing Imposter Syndrome

But, a new study suggests, the competitive nature of STEM courses may be having a knock-on effect on the confidence of certain students, in this case first-generation college attendees (those who are the first in their family to go to university). Such students, the paper argues, are more likely to experience “imposter syndrome” — the feeling that they don’t belong or don’t have the skills or intelligence to continue on their studies — precisely because of this atmosphere of competition.

Journal Reference:

Canning, E. A., LaCosse, J., Kroeper, K. M., & Murphy, M. C. (2019).

Feeling Like an Imposter: The Effect of Perceived Classroom Competition on the Daily Psychological Experiences of First-Generation College Students.

Social Psychological and Personality Science.

Link: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1948550619882032

https://doi.org/10.1177/1948550619882032

Abstract

Many college students intend to pursue science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) careers but quickly abandon these goals when confronted with notoriously competitive STEM courses that often pit students against each other. This emphasis on interpersonal competition could be especially detrimental for first-generation (FG) college students, an underrepresented group in STEM fields which more strongly values communality and collaboration relative to their continuing-generation peers. Thus, FG students may experience more imposter feelings in STEM courses perceived as having a competitive culture. A longitudinal study (with 818 students and 2,638 experience-sampling observations) found that perceived classroom competition was associated with greater daily in-class imposter feelings among all students—but especially among FG students. Imposter feelings in turn predicted students’ end-of-term course engagement, attendance, dropout intentions, and course grades. Classroom competition and the imposter feelings it engenders may be an overlooked barrier for promoting the engagement, performance, and retention of FG students in STEM.