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Intended Majors and Career Interests: Men and Women Really Are from Different Planets. Debra FitzGerald Senior Consultant, Client Outreach ACT Midwest Region Tim Osborn Senior Consultant, Program Solutions ACT Midwest Region. Expressed and Measured Interests.
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Intended Majors and Career Interests: Men and Women Really Are from Different Planets Debra FitzGerald Senior Consultant, Client Outreach ACT Midwest Region Tim Osborn Senior Consultant, Program Solutions ACT Midwest Region
Expressed and Measured Interests • With respect to intended majors and careers, ACT collects two types of information: • Expressed Interests: • When students register for the ACT they are asked to specify an intended major (from a choice of 295) and an occupational choice (from the same list of 295). • Measured Interests: • When students register for the ACT they are asked to complete a 72 item Interest Inventory that diagnoses their career interest and places the student’s interests on the ACT World of Work Map.
Goals of the Presentation • During the presentation we will look at differences in expressed and measured major and career interests between men and women • We will also look at how the gender differences correlate to student preferences for 4-year public and 4-year private institutions
Intended Majors by Male/Female Ratio and ACT Composite Score Bands • The first table shows majors where male and female interest is strongest • Red: females more than 50% more likely to have this intended major • Green: males more than 50% more likely to have this intended major • For convenience of reporting, the 295 individual majors are “rolled up” into 18 groupings of similar majors
Intended Major by Female/Male Ratio and ACT Composite Score Band
Intended Majors by Frequency • The next two tables show intended majors by frequency and ACT Composite Score bands • The percents are the comparative frequency within each score band (total N = 1,540,876) • The second table also shows majors where male and female interest is strongest • Light Red: females more than 50% more likely to have this intended major • Light Green: males more than 50% more likely to have this intended major
Red: >9% Green: <6% Intended Major by Column Frequency and ACT Composite Score Band
Intended Major by Column Frequency and ACT Composite Score Band & Strong Male/Female Interest
ACT Composite Scores by Gender • The next chart shows the percentage of men and women whose ACT Composite score falls in particular ability bands • More women than men test in total • Men are over-represented at the highest and lowest score bands • Women are over-represented at the middle ability levels • Thus, the ability bands with the most total tested students (ACT 16-24) have the largest gap between male and female testers: 10-13%.
Intended Majors by 4-yr Public/Private Ratio and ACT Composite Score Bands • The next table shows majors by preferred institution type • Red: greater than a ratio of 1, 4-yr private more likely to have this intended major • Green: less than a ratio of 1, 4-yr publicmore likely to have this intended major
Intended Major by 4-year Priv/4-year Pub Ratio and ACT Comp. Score Band
Correlations by Gender and Institution Type Preference • Majority Male and 4-yr Public • Agric. & Natural Res Conservation (ACT 1-27) • Architecture (ACT 1-32) • Computer Science & Math • Engineering • Engineering Technology & Drafting • Repair, Production & Construction • Undecided (ACT 1-27)
Correlations by Gender and Institution Type Preference • Majority Female and 4-yr Public • Agric. & Natural Res Conservation (ACT 28-36) • Architecture (ACT 33-36) • Communications (ACT 33-36) • Community, Family & Personal Services • Education (ACT 24-26) • Health Administration & Assisting (ACT 1-32) • Health Sciences & Technologies
Correlations by Gender and Institution Type Preference • Majority Male and 4-yr Private • Area, Ethnic & Multidisciplinary (ACT 1-15; 20-23) • Arts: Visual & Performing (ACT 1-15) • Business (strong male; slightly more private) • Communications (ACT 1-15) • Philosophy, Religion & Theology
Correlations by Gender and Institution Type Preference • Majority Female and 4-yr Private • Area, Ethnic & Multidisciplinary (ACT 16-19; 24-36) • Arts: Visual and Performing (ACT 16-36) • Communications (ACT 16-32) • Education (ACT 1-23) • English & Foreign Languages • Sciences: Biological & Physical • Social Sciences & Law • Undecided (ACT 28-36)
Intended Major by Frequency and ACT Composite Score Band • The table on the next slide shows how student interest in intended major changes as ability level rises. • The columns labeled “1-15” and “33-36” show the relative rank from 1 to 18 of student interest in the majors in that grouping • The column labeled “Trend 1-36” shows how the ranks change from 1-15 to 33-36 and are sorted to show the groups that gain the most in frequency rank • You will note that the groups of majors that gain the most are the most math-intensive and reading-intensive
Intended Major by Frequency Rank and ACT Composite Score Band
ACT Interest Inventory andWorld of Work Map • The next part of the presentation shows data for the ACT Interest Inventory and World of Work Map Regions • Gender differences are highlighted as are differences among students preferring to attend 4-year public and 4-year private institutions
The ACT Interest Inventory measures six major types of interest. The six standard scores and percentile ranks are based on a nationally representative sample of grade 12 students. On the World-of-Work Map, region indicators help the student relate work activity preferences, as assessed by the ACT Interest Inventory, to groups of occupations. The World-of-Work Map appears on the back of the College Report.
Educational and Vocational Plans • A major and first vocational choice, selected by the student from an extensive list of educational majors and vocational choices - VERY SURE, FAIRLY SURE, or NOT SURE. • Student's ultimate degree objective from among the following: • BUS/TECH CERTIFICATE—vocational/technical or certificate program • ASSOCIATE'S DEGREE (2 YR)—two-year college degree • BACHELOR'S DEGREE (4 YR)—bachelor's degree program • GRAD STUDY/MASTER'S LEVEL—one or two years of graduate study (MA, MBA, etc.) • DOCTORATE/PROF DEGREE—professional level degree (PhD, MD, JD, etc.) • OTHER
Interest Inventory by Male/Female Ratioand ACT Comp. Score Bands • The next table shows Map Regions where male and female interest is strongest • Red: females more than 50% more likely to be in this Map Region • Green: males more than 50% more likely to be in this Map Region
Interest Inventory by Female/Male Ratio and ACT Composite Score Band
Selected Careers in Map Regions where Female Interest is Strongest: People & Ideas; People & Data • Map Region 1 (ACT 1-15) • Human resources management & training • Map Region 2 (1-15) • Marketing & sales • Map Region 9 (ACT 16-23) • Medical technologies • Map Region 10 • Applied arts (visual); medical diagnosis & treatment; social science • Map Region 11 • Applied arts (written & spoken); creative & performing arts • Map Region 12 • Community services; education; health care
Selected Careers in Map Regions where Male Interest is Strongest: Data & Things; (Things & Ideas) • Map Region 4 (ACT 1-23) • Financial transactions; communications & records • Map Region 5 (1-27) • Distribution & dispatching • Map Region 6 • Ag/forestry & related; transport operation & related; computer/info specialties • Map Region 7 (ACT 24-32) • Construction & maintenance; mechanical & electrical specialties; crafts & related; manufacturing & processing
Map Regions by 4-yr Public/Private Colleges Ratio and ACT Composite Score Bands • The next table shows Map Regions by preferred institution type • Red: greater than a ratio of 1, 4-yr private more likely to be in this Map Region • Green: less than a ratio of 1, 4-yr publicmore likely to be in this Map Region
Interest Inventory by 4-year Priv/4-year Pub Ratio and ACT Comp. Score Band
Map Regions by Frequency • The next three tables shows Map Regions by frequency and ACT Composite Score bands • The percents listed are the comparative frequency within each score band (total N = 1,375,273) • The tables also show Map Regions where male and female interest is strongest (also 2-yr) • Red: >9% of students in an ability band • Green: <6% of students in an ability band
Red: >9% Green: <6% Interest Inventory by Column Frequency and ACT Composite Score BandFemale Students
Red: >9% Green: <6% Interest Inventory by Column Frequency and ACT Composite Score BandMale Students
Red: >9% Green: <6% Interest Inventory by Column Frequency and ACT Composite Score Band2-Yr Public Students
Summary of Data on Measured & Expressed Interests & Preferred Inst. Type
Conclusions • Male and female students have clearly different patterns of intended majors and Interest Inventory Map Regions • As ability levels rise, students choose intended majors that are more math & reading intensive • On the Interest Inventory, female students predominant in the two “people areas”: people and ideas & people and data • On the Interest Inventory, male students predominant in the two “things areas”: data and things & things and ideas
Conclusions (continued) • Students preferring 4-yr publics are predominant in Map Regions 3-7 (data and things) • Students preferring 4-yr privates are predominant in Map Regions 8-2 (ideas and people) • The differences between 4-yr public and private not as strong as differences between male and female
Implications • Students choosing selective public and private universities seem to have intended majors and interests that fit mission of those schools • Students choosing regional publics and 2-yr publics seem to have intended majors and interests that fit mission of those schools
Implications (continued) • What about non-selective liberal arts colleges, especially those looking for more men? • There may be potential mismatches between ability level of enrolled students and interest in liberal arts areas • Male students at middle and lower ability levels more tuned to 4-yr public and less tuned to liberal arts majors • Non-selective privates may enroll more students primarily choosing institution for non-academic reasons: involvement in athletics, other activities, environment, small classes, academic support, etc.
A Word about the Relationship between Ability, Majors, and Interest Inventory • ACT calculates a “Fit Index” to measure the congruence between intended major and Interest Inventory Scores • Students at lower ability levels have less congruence than students at higher ability levels • Put differently, higher ability students may be making more thoughtful and appropriate choices
Major Enhancement to the ACT Electronic Record • Beginning in September 2012, ACT will begin appending 5 new data elements to the ACT Score Report: • Interest-Major Fit score • Four predictive modeling indexes
The Interest-Major Fit Index • The Fit score shows the strength of the relationship between a student’s profile of interests and the profile of interests of students in a given major. • Interest-major fit clearly benefits both students and the college they attend: students in “good-fit majors” are more likely to stay in college, stay in their major and finish sooner.
Predicting Enrollment Behavior with Four Indexes • The Mobility Index predicts the likelihood of a student enrolling at an out-of-state institution • The Institution Type Index predicts the likelihood of a student enrolling at a private institution • The Selectivity Index predicts the selectivity of the institution at which the student is likely to enroll • The Institution Size Index predicts the size of the institution at which the student is likely to enroll
Debra FitzGerald Senior Consultant, Client Outreach ACT Midwest Region Lincolnshire, IL 847-634-2560 debra.fitzgerald@act.org Tim Osborn Senior Consultant, Program Solutions ACT Midwest Region Lincolnshire, IL 847-634-2560 tim.osborn@act.org