journal article Jan 30, 2025

Affective Politics of Belonging to STEM: Some Conceptual and Methodological Considerations

Science Education Vol. 110 No. 1 pp. 206-219 · Wiley
View at Publisher Save 10.1002/sce.21951
Abstract
ABSTRACT

This paper is situated within the vast literature that examines issues of under‐representation, microaggressions, and social inequities faced by racially and gender diverse students in STEM education. As part of the special issue “Centering Affect and Emotion Toward Justice and Dignity in Science Education,” it focuses on analyzing the affective dimensions of racialized students' encounters in postsecondary settings to highlight
affective politics of belonging
to STEM fields within a Canadian context. Research on emotions in science education can benefit from a
process‐oriented
view of emotions to better understand
how
exclusionary boundaries get (re)formed between bodies, which can inform science equity efforts. One major implication of this work is to offer a different analytical tool for approaching notions of
belonging
as commonly employed in science education literature. Through a cultural political analysis of emotions, desires, and affects, we seek to go beyond psycho‐social views on belonging as synonymous with understanding students' sense of belonging in STEM. Sense of belonging maintains emotions as interiorized positive feelings, whereby belonging is often employed as a self‐explanatory term, if not an end goal, conflating it with (group) identity. Rather, we seek to analyze
how
belonging is affectively constituted in day‐to‐day encounters between students and within spaces of postsecondary STEM. Careful not to reproduce deterministic and static analyses, we further attend to students' longings and desires for encountering STEM and higher education spaces anew. Finally, we consider some methodological affordances and limitations for attuning to
the affective
and
embodied
in students' responses to an exploratory survey.
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Details
Published
Jan 30, 2025
Vol/Issue
110(1)
Pages
206-219
License
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Cite This Article
Sarah El Halwany, Jennifer D. Adams (2025). Affective Politics of Belonging to STEM: Some Conceptual and Methodological Considerations. Science Education, 110(1), 206-219. https://doi.org/10.1002/sce.21951
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