change, flip, and listen david asai [email protected]

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Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai [email protected]

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Page 1: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Change, Flip, and Listen

David [email protected]

Page 2: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Terminal Island

Page 3: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

http://blogs.dailybreeze.com/history/files/import/46084-japanesefishermen.jpg

Fish Harbor, Terminal Island

Page 4: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Sadaichi Asai(b. 1914)

Page 6: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Race matters

Page 7: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

1. …is a property of a group, and so can benefit a field that depends on groups.

2. …adds different perspectives, interpretations, tools.

3. …trumps ability when the problem is difficult and when there is a large number of problem-solvers.

Scott Page, “The Difference,” 2007Princeton University Press

Diversity produces excellence

Page 8: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

An Opportunity and a Challenge

Page 9: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

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non-Hispanic White

all minorities

Pers

ons,

in m

illio

ns

2010 2050

Opportunity: increasingly diverse talent pool

“Majority Minority”:

• All U.S. by 2042

• 18 yrs and younger by 2018

Page 10: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Challenge: we fail to take advantage of the diverse talent pool

NSF data for 2006, from Expanding Underrepresented Minority Participation, National Academies, 2011.

U.S. talent pool

28.5%URM

Scientific workforce

White + Asian

URM

9.1% URM

Page 11: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

NSF WEBCASPAR (2000-05)

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US population undergrads science science baccalaureates PhDs

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tion

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are

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erre

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ities

(%)

Undergraduate years are critical

Page 12: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

G. Huang et al., 2000, Entry and persistence of women and minorities in college science and engineering education, US. Dept. Education, National Center for Education Statistics

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Whites + AsiansURMs

Complete Persist Switch Drop out

URMs leave STEM 2X rate of whites and Asians

Page 13: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Three suggestions

1. Change the metaphor

2. Flip the formula

3. Listen to difference

easy

hard

Page 14: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

1. Change the metaphor (easy)

Page 15: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

“Light at the end of the tunnel”

“Domino theory”

Metaphors can be powerful

“Fiscal cliff”

“Red zone”

Page 16: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

http://www.sadeem.ae/Pipeline_at_Kuparuk.jpg

“Pipeline”

Page 17: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

STEM Pipeline is Leaking Badly*

David Marcy, Cal Lutheran

Page 18: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Administrator, HHMI

High School

University, B.S.

Graduate school, Ph.D.

Post-doc (x2)

Professor (x2)

Page 19: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Many students today….High school

Community collegeWork

Military

Baccalaureate

Next???

Page 20: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Watershed

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/84/SAR_Map.jpg

Page 21: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Watershed

• Tributaries from many different sources, different environments, different pathways, different velocities.

• Boundaries between inputs are not always exact and can change with conditions.

• Outcomes are many and diverse.

Page 22: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

STEM watershed

• Tributaries:– family-centric – transfer students– traditional

• Outcomes:– one touch– allied professions– specialists

Page 23: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

2. Flip the formula(medium difficulty)

Page 24: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

STEM business model:

1. High interest – 40% of all entering freshmen

2. “Gateway” courses

3. Research

4. Focus on small number of outcomes – medicine or PhD

- “weed out” 60% all, - “weed out” 80% URMs

- expensive, - emphasizes selection

Page 25: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Flip the formula:

• Active learning is superior to “teach by telling”– Scott Freeman et al., 2014. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.

• Course-based research experiences (CREs)– scale – early– emphasize development of potential instead of

selection of past accomplishments

Page 26: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Mycobacterium smegmatis

GenBank

HHMI SEA PHAGES course

Page 27: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Accomplishments:

• > 2,000 students at 73 schools (2013-14)• students make scientific discoveries:

– > 48,000 genes (865 novel genes), 9 new clusters– 82% of mycobacteriophage GenBank sequences

contributed by SEA-PHAGES students– 17 publications (10 with undergrad co-authors)

• students do better in class • students stay in science

Jordan et al., 2014. mBio 5: e01051-13

Page 28: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

www.hhmi.org/sea

Goal: 5,000 students per year

Page 29: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

CostsApprentice-based summer research: $5,500 - $10,000 per student (excludes faculty salaries)

SEA-PHAGES: approx. $200 - $250 per student for supplies, EM, sequencing (excludes salaries of faculty, TAs)

Intro lab courses at 17 “very high” research universities: $56 per student (excludes salaries of faculty, TAs). Range: $10 - $337 per student.

Page 30: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

$56. Flip the formula.

Introductory courses = opportunity to make a difference

Page 31: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

3. Listen to difference(difficult)

Practice, practice, practice

Page 32: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

What’s important in mentoring?

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MentorsMentees

Byars-Winston, Benbow, Leverett, Pfund, Branchaw, Owen, 2013.

Race Gender Talk about difference

Page 33: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Intent vs. Impact

Page 34: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

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Page 35: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Faculty privilege

Page 36: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Biology 231 is the third course in our four-semester core curriculum for Biology majors. In addition, many pre-professional students from other majors, like XXXX, also take BIOL 231. Our course is a rigorous attempt to link molecular structure with biological function. We first focus on the macromolecules of the cell, including proteins, membranes, nucleic acids, and carbohydrates; in each case the message is that structure leads to function. We then discuss in quantitative detail the energetics of cell biology, including membrane potentials, the use of ATP in coupled reactions, the metabolism of glucose and oxidative phosphorylation to produce ATP, and photosynthesis. Then we put some of these pieces together, discussing in detail selected aspects of cell biology, including signal transduction, cotranslational insertion of membrane/secreted proteins, intracellular trafficking of membrane bounded organelles, and cell motility. All exams are answered with short essays or calculations (no calculators permitted!). The emphasis is on precise problem solving. For many, BIOL 231 proves to be the “weed-out” course.

Our course is a rigorous attempt to link molecular structure with biological function.

All exams are answered with short essays or calculations (no calculators permitted!). The emphasis is on precise problem solving. For many, BIOL 231 proves to be the “weed-out” course.

Page 37: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

“Majority rules”

Page 38: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

http://d1jrw5jterzxwu.cloudfront.net/sites/default/files/styles/article_header_image/public/article_media/changethemascotsign.jpg

Page 39: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

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Page 40: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Individual vs. group

Page 41: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/files/blogger2wp/Gender-SexismMath.png

Identity defined by group

Page 42: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

What’s in a name?

“I’m not prejudiced”

Page 43: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

1. Unintended bias in the workplace….

• Emily…Anne…Jill…Allison…Laurie…Sarah… Meredith…Carrie…Kristen…Todd…Neil… Geoffrey…Brett…Brendan…Greg…Matthew… Jay…Brad

• Aisha…Keisha…Tamika…Lakisha…Tanisha… Latoya…Kenya…Latonya…Ebony…Rasheed… Tremayne…Kareem…Darnell…Tyrone…Hakim…Jamal…Leroy…Jermaine

M Bertrand and S. Mullainathan, 2004.Poverty Action Lab 3: 1-27.

Page 44: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

2. What about faculty?• 6,500 faculty, 89 disciplines, 259 universities• Email request to meet to discuss grad school:

– Brad Anderson, Meredith Roberts– Lamar Washington, Keisha Thomas– Carlos Lopez, Gabriella Rodriguez– Raj Singh, Sonali Desai– Chang Huang, Mei Chen

• Whether faculty member agreed to meet “student”

K.L Milkman, M. Akinoa, D. Chugh, 2014.

Page 45: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Faculty are biased too…

• Faculty ignored requests from women and minorities at a higher rate than requests from white males

• Response rate decreased with:– Higher-paying disciplines– Private elite universities

• Response rate the same regardless of race and gender of faculty respondent

Milkman et al., 2014

Page 46: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

3. What about scientists?

• Application for lab manager position• Fictitious male or female applicant• Evaluations by lab PIs:

– Competence– Hireability– Worthy of mentoring– Starting salary

Moss-Racusin et al., 2012. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 109: 16474-16479.

Page 47: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Competence

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Scientists are biased too…

Moss-Racusin et al., 2012. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 109: 16474-16479

Page 48: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

“This is for your own good.”

Page 49: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

“mismatch hypothesis”

“…as a result of the mismatching, many blacks and Hispanics who likely would have excelled at less elite schools are placed in a position where underperformance is all but inevitable because they are less academically prepared than the white and Asian students with whom they must compete.”

Justice Clarence Thomas, 2013concurring opinion, Fisher v. U Texas

Page 50: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

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Page 51: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Testing the “mismatch hypothesis”M. Kurlaender and E. Grodsky. 2013. “Mismatch and the paternalistic justification

for selective college admissions.” Sociology of Education 86: 294-310.

• University of California– Elite: Berkeley, San Diego, UCLA (30% acceptance)– Not-quite-elite: Davis, Irvine, Riverside, Santa

Barbara, Santa Cruz (59% acceptance)• 2004, “Guaranteed Transfer Option” (GTO)

(2,300 students)• 491 chose to attend elite campus

Page 52: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

• GPAs of GTO students statistically same as elite students.

• GTO students no more or less likely to drop out of elite schools.

• GTO students less likely to drop out than peers who chose non-elite schools.

• Mismatch effects no greater for minorities than for whites and Asians.

Findings….

Page 53: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

http://www.examiner.com/images/blog/wysiwyg/image/Sonia_Sotomayor(15).jpg

“…And race matters for reasons that really are only skin deep, that cannot be discussed any other way, and that cannot be wished away. Race matters to a young man’s view of society when he spends his teenage years watching others tense up as he passes….Race matters to a young woman’s sense of self when she states her hometown, and then is pressed, ‘No, where are you really from?’….Race matters to a young person addressed by a stranger in a foreign language, which he does not understand because only English was spoken at home. Race matters because of the slights, the snickers, the silent judgments that reinforce that most crippling of thoughts: ‘I do not belong here.’”

Schuette v. Coalition…(BAMN), 2014. Justice Sotomayor, dissenting

Page 54: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org

Race matters

Page 55: Change, Flip, and Listen David Asai asaid@hhmi.org