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Exploring Funds of Knowledge and Social Capital of Migratory Students in STEM: Revised Instrument

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Conference

2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition

Location

Portland, Oregon

Publication Date

June 23, 2024

Start Date

June 23, 2024

End Date

July 12, 2024

Conference Session

Empowering Marginalized Voices in STEM: Perspectives and Initiatives

Tagged Division

Minorities in Engineering Division(MIND)

Tagged Topic

Diversity

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/47413

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Paper Authors

biography

Ulises Juan Trujillo Garcia Arizona State University Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0009-0001-2863-3964

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Ulises Trujillo Garcia (he/him/él) is pursuing a Ph.D. in Engineering Education Systems and Design at Arizona State University. He graduated from Boise State University with a Bachelors of Science in Civil Engineering. During his undergraduate Ulises held a number of leadership positions during his undergraduate career, which earned him a variety of accolades. These experiences helped him identify his passion which is rooted in supporting Latina/o/x students with migrant farm working backgrounds in higher education, especially in engineering spaces. Currently, Ulises is working on a project titled "Empowering Children of Migratory/Seasonal Farmworkers with Gamification and Culturally-Responsive Engineering Design Instruction." He is a fellow for the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program, a former fellow for the Station1 Frontiers Fellowship, the Micron Academy for Inclusive Leadership, and HACU ¡Adelante! Leadership Institute. In the summer of 2021, Ulises started a scholarship for migrant students in Eastern Oregon to pursue higher education, raising over $15,000 in scholarship dollars for this population. As a first-generation, low-income Latino from a farm-working family, he is passionate about helping his community and devotes his time to diverse educational and leadership causes.

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Abstract

Migratory/seasonal farmworker (MSFW) families in the United States are defined as those living a mobile lifestyle following the crops across the country. The mobile lifestyle of migratory families impacts their children by creating financial instability, structural barriers, and interruptions to their education. This inconsistent access to high-quality education as a result of frequent moves and lack of resources in the regions they live in has pushed and ignored migratory students out of the popular conversation in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) regarding broadening participation. Thus, this work revised existing measures of the frameworks of funds of knowledge and social capital, which will help to empirically examine how bodies of knowledge (e.g., skills, experiences, and knowledge accumulated from home) are transformed and supported by migratory students’ circles of influence (e.g., social networks and community assets that assist students in navigating social structures) given their unique context of being MSFW students in STEM education. A survey was distributed to program directors of the College Assistance Migrant Program (CAMP), which is a federally funded program that assists children of migratory families during their first year of college. The survey was created from two prior validated instruments on funds of knowledge and community cultural wealth. A total of 108 undergraduate migratory students in STEM fields who were either previously or currently associated with CAMP responded to the survey. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were used to confirm the underlying theoretical relationships between the survey items and the predicted constructs. Results supported a two latent construct model with six items that make up the instrument: 1.) knowledge/experience outside of school and 2.) social networks in the form of neighborhood friends. These results add to the ongoing conversation of combining the frameworks of funds of knowledge and with forms of capital (e.g., social capital) to create one that is more comprehensive and identify specific networks and places that support the development of funds of knowledge of underrepresented students in STEM. The results from our study suggest that migratory student’s neighborhood friends play a significant role in the development, activation or exchange of funds of knowledge to navigate STEM spaces.

Trujillo Garcia, U. J. (2024, June), Exploring Funds of Knowledge and Social Capital of Migratory Students in STEM: Revised Instrument Paper presented at 2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Portland, Oregon. https://peer.asee.org/47413

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