This article is published in the February 2019 issue.

Feeling Like an Outsider in Computing? You Are Not Alone!


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Underrepresented students in computing may find themselves isolated and feel like they don’t belong in their field. This graphic shows the percentage of undergraduate students who reported feeling like an outsider in computing by their gender, race/ethnicity, and/or disability status. Significantly higher percentages of underrepresented students (29% and above) reported feeling like an outsider in computing than majority men with no disabilities (17%). This lack of a sense of belonging was highest among the students with disabilities who are women or racial/ethnic minorities (45-46%).

Survey data presented here supports existing research on sense of belonging. Underrepresented students tend to have a lower sense of belonging to the field (e.g., feel more isolated). The lack of a sense of belonging, in turn, contributes to lower persistence levels. Higher drop-out rates among students who are already underrepresented in the field is bound to perpetuate the lack of diversity in the computing workforce. This result highlights the importance of interventions that focus on increasing cohort formation and mentoring of underrepresented students, since these interventions are likely to help students persist in their field.

Notes: The survey data used in this chart were collected during the fall 2017 by CERP via the Data Buddies Project. The sample includes 9,591 undergraduate students majoring in a computing field. Students were asked to rate their level of agreement with the statement “I feel like an outsider in computing” on a scale of strongly disagree (1) to strongly agree (5). The graphic shows percentage of students who agree or strongly agree with this statement.

Underrepresented minorities include students who identify as Black/African American, of Hispanic or Latino descent, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, or multiracial in which at least one of their multiracial identities includes the earlier listed racial/ethnic groups. URMW includes students who are URM and/or identify as woman. Majority men includes White and Asian students who identify as man. Disability status is determined based on students’ responses to a question asking whether they have a disability or not. Further intersections of the identity groups presented here were omitted due to shrinking sample sizes, which reduces the reliability of the results.

All underrepresented groups are statistically significantly different than majority men w/o disabilities based on z-tests and .05 significance level.


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This analysis is brought to you by the CRA’s Center for Evaluating the Research Pipeline (CERP). CERP provides social science research and comparative evaluation for the computing community. Subscribe to the CERP newsletter here.

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grant numbers (CNS-1246649, DUE-1431112, and DUE 1821136). Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.