Past Projects

Past Research & Evaluation Projects

Time to Graduation and Attrition Rates for Undergraduate Women at the University of Arizona, 2011-2021

 

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arizona graduation

This research paper is a UAIR and WISE collaboration that explores variable retention and graduation rates of women at the University of Arizona with a focus on STEM programs. We utilized inferential methods, namely survival and churn predictive analysis, upon 10 years of undergraduate enrollment data from 2011-2021 to determine statistically significant differences in retention and graduation outcomes.

Women in STEM Retention & Graduation Data Dashboard, 2017-2022

 

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dashboard

This collaboration between UAIR and WISE produced a publicly accessible data dashboard that reports retention and graduation rates by gender across the UArizona. This dashboard allows users to easily visualize how rates for female students vary compare to male students, while also allowing data to be disaggregated by race/ethnicity, entry college, field of study, first generation status, and residency status. 

COVID-Related Impacts on UArizona's STEM Students, May 2020

 

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masks

As the COVID-19 pandemic began to unfold in spring 2020, researchers with the Women in Science and Engineering (WISE) program quickly realized that students pursuing degrees in science and engineering were facing particular challenges. In response, Drs. Stephanie Murphy and Jill Williams designed a study to assess COVID-related impacts on STEM students. Drs. Murphy and Williams drew on survey findings to develop policy recommendations for University of Arizona administrators, faculty, and staff. Findings and recommendations were shared with members of the University of Arizona community

An Intersectional Analysis of STEM Student Outcomes at UArizona, 2014-2020

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intersectionality

This report takes an intersectional approach to understanding STEM student outcomes at the University of Arizona by assessing group-based differences along the axes of gender, ethnicity, first generation status, and Pell eligibility. Drawing on over 40,000 student records from between 2014-2020, we analyzed entry, persistence, and graduation trends at the institutional, college, and departmental scales. The results demonstrate statistically significant disparities in some STEM student outcomes across the intersectional groups.