research
research
2021, 6(1), 02
ISSN: 2468-4368
Citation: Hatisaru, V. (2021). Theory-driven Determinants of School Students’ STEM Career Goals: A
Preliminary Investigation. European Journal of STEM Education, 6(1), 02.
https://doi.org/10.20897/ejsteme/9558
ABSTRACT
This study investigated Turkish school students’ attitudes towards STEM disciplines and careers and
explored determinants of students’ STEM career goals. In total, 117 lower secondary school students (aged
11 to 14) completed the STEM Semantic Survey including an open-ended question about their career intention
after high school and the reasons for their goals. Using the conceptualisation of the influences of
behavioural, personal, and contextual variables in career choice decisions, the students’ descriptions of
career goal reasons were presented to elaborate on the variables that influence their STEM career goals.
Attitudes towards individual STEM disciplines were from moderate to high and towards STEM careers
were high. The gender difference was negligible. One of the key determinants of students’ career intentions
was interests, involving interest in a particular career (e.g., architect) and career-relevant activities (e.g.,
planning, drawing, and designing) or subjects (e.g., mathematics). Larger, societal influences (altruism and
patriotism) were among the motives of students’ career goals. Implications for research, practice, and policy-
making were presented.
Keywords: draw a mathematics classroom, social cognitive career theory, STEM career goals, school
students
INTRODUCTION
STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) capability is one of the key competences necessary
for functioning effectively in the modern world and contributing to technological and economical high productivity
(Jolly, Campbell, & Perlman, 2004; Office of the Chief Scientist, 2012). STEM capability can also be a mean of
self-fulfilment and personal enrichment. Enhancing school students’ STEM competences, thus, meets not only
societal, but also individual needs (Sjaastad, 2012). Many countries consider the issue of competence in STEM as
important and incorporate strategies for its development during schooling, at the highest policy level. Despite these
influences, there remains a lack of interest in students towards STEM subjects. Both policy documents and research
studies indicate international declines in degrees awarded from STEM programs (Prieto & Dugar, 2017). Reports
conclude that admission in and graduation from STEM-related areas have fallen in Australia (Australian Academy
of Science, 2016; Barrington & Evans, 2014), the USA (Christensen, Knezek, & Tyler-Wood, 2014), Europe
(Kearney, 2016), and in Turkey (Kivanc, Sener, Mumcuogullari, & Sunacoglu, 2017). Exploring what motivates
school students to learn STEM subjects, continues to be a concern for researchers, educators, and policymakers.
There is a need to better understand why students would choose to study STEM-related areas, and what
opportunities and resources in schools encourage them to enrol and remain in STEM fields.
Copyright © 2021 by Author/s and Licensed by Lectito BV, Netherlands. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons
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Hatisaru / Theory-driven Determinants of School Students’ STEM Career Goals: A Preliminary Investigation
PURPOSE AND RESEARCH QUESTIONS
The aims of this paper are: (1) to investigate school students’ attitudes towards STEM disciplines and careers;
(2) to describe behavioural (self-efficacy, outcome expectations, interests, and goals), personal (gender), and
environmental (larger, societal context) influences on students’ career intents; and (3) to assess the suitability of a
theoretical framework for studying the factors that influence school students’ STEM career goals. The overall
objective is to increase understanding of theory-driven determinants of school students’ career intentions
concerning STEM. The STEM Semantic Survey (Christensen et al., 2014) provided data from a sample of Turkish
lower secondary school students (aged 11 to 14), in the Draw a Mathematics Classroom study which is reported
elsewhere (Hatisaru, 2020a; in press). Students’ responses to the Survey items are analysed in light of the above
aims. As a theoretical base, the conceptualisation of their career choice is based on the behavioural, personal, and
environmental determinants, as suggested by Lent, Brown, and Hackett (1994, 2000). This framework is utilised
to discuss what factors influence students’ intentions in relation to pursuing a STEM career. The research questions
that guide the study are:
1. What are students’ attitudes towards individual STEM disciplines and STEM careers? How do their
attitudes vary by gender?
2. What are students’ intended career choice (STEM or non-STEM)? How do their choice vary by gender?
3. What are the determinants of their career goals?
BACKGROUND
Dispositions towards STEM have been explored in different ways during the last decades. Much has been
written about what factors contributing to students’ orientations to STEM subjects and careers. There has been
consistent evidence that students’ perceptions of psychosocial aspects of the classroom environment (e.g., teacher
support, student cohesiveness, and competitiveness) are associated with students’ STEM learning outcomes
(Fraser, 2014) such as attitudes, interest, or motivation for learning (e.g., Afari, Aldridge, Fraser, & Khine, 2013).
The perceived teaching and learning practices in STEM classrooms have been received attention as well. Lyons
(2006) examined experiences of school science reported by high school students in Sweden, Australia, and England
in three interpretive studies. Three characteristics of school science emerged from students’ narrative reflections:
the transmissive pedagogy; decontextualized content; and unnecessary difficulty of school science. These perceived
classroom experiences were found to have negative influences on students’ interest and enrolments in both in high
school and tertiary level science courses.
Various other disparate explanations have been offered. Informal learning experiences and afterschool
programmes in STEM (e.g., robotics summer camps and media design projects) were found positively influence
high school students’ attitudes towards science and technology and interest in an engineering career (Ayar, 2015;
Karahan, Bilici, & Unal, 2015; Prieto & Dugar, 2017). Primary and lower secondary students evaluated science
fairs positively and expressed a wish that science affairs became more regular (Gülgün et al., 2020). For high school
graduates, choosing a STEM major was influenced by intentions to major in STEM and high school mathematics
achievement. Intent to major in STEM was impacted by grade 12 mathematics achievement, having mathematics
and science courses, and mathematics self-efficacy. All these three variables were influenced by early achievement
in and attitudes towards mathematics (Wang, 2013). Thus, all self-efficacy, outcomes expectations, and significant
persons have been of importance. Among a group of American and Turkish high-ability high school students, self-
motivation (inclination) was the most influential factor in American students’ interest to STEM careers, while it
was mother’s education level for Turkish students. The American students’ interests to STEM careers were owing
to their self-motivation to undertake STEM careers and school-related factors (e.g., STEM clubs, fairs). The
Turkish students’ interests were predominantly influenced by potential professional income and social expectations
(influence of others involving parents, teachers, peers, and relatives) (Bahar & Adiguzel, 2016). Teachers and
parents were the main source of inspiration for Norwegian university students’ STEM-related educational choice.
Parents who engaged in STEM themselves were models for their children making the STEM-related choices
familiar to them. Teachers were also model for students who displayed how STEM might bring fulfilment in
individuals’ lives and who gave students positive STEM learning experiences (Sjaastad, 2012). Parents or family
members were similarly influential on middle school students’ future career plans from a diverse and disadvantaged
rural community (Kier & Blanchard, 2021).
STEM dispositions have often been investigated with respect to gender (Tripney et al., 2010). There have been
some inconsistencies in gender-related findings. While some studies have revealed that females were less positive
than males in pursuing careers in STEM (Sadler, Sonnert, Hazari, & Tai, 2012), other studies showed that females’
semantic perceptions of pursuing STEM careers were significantly more positive than males (Christensen et al.,
2014). K-12 educators and pre-college STEM outreach programs played a role in influencing and motivating
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European Journal of STEM Education, 2021, 6(1), 02
undergraduate female students – as well as male students – to enrol and persist in college level STEM degree
programmes (Edzie, 2014). There have been calls that school students need to be motivated towards STEM
subjects as those students were more likely to pursue STEM-related careers (Eurydice, 2011; Maltese & Tai, 2010;
Prieto & Dugar, 2017). Teachers of STEM have been encouraged to move away from teacher-directed pedagogies
and “make learning active” (Maltese & Tai, 2010, p. 900) to improve student motivation to and interest in STEM
subjects (Hasni & Potvin, 2015). Effective pedagogies have included: engaging students in the learning processes
and promoting authentic scientific inquiry (Sirinterlikci, Zane, & Sirinterlikci, 2009); embedding learning in
concrete and meaningful problems or tasks and ensuring students collaborate with others to solve problems
(Hatisaru & Kucukturan, 2011; Hmelo-Silver, 2004); enabling students to link the knowledge they learn at school
with their lives outside the school (Potvin & Hasni, 2014); and teaching STEM in an integrated way (Knipprath et
al., 2018). Students in different educational and national contexts, nevertheless, have responded to what their
context provides to them in different ways (Lent et al., 2000; Thomas & Watters, 2015).
In Turkey, lower secondary education lasts for four years (grades 5 to 8, aged 10 to 15) and is provided by
secondary schools. Mathematics and science are taught as a mandatory and major subject at all levels of schooling
and is tested by national examinations at the end of lower and upper secondary education. Mathematical and
science questions make up a good deal of the questions for both high school and university entrance exams
(European Schoolnet, 2018). Teaching practices have been largely influenced by these nation-wide standardised
exams. It is common for teachers to rely on lecture-style teaching and emphasising the procedural knowledge and
correct use of procedures for preparing students for examinations. (Ayar, 2015; Kearney, 2016). Despite the broad
agreement that teacher-directed teaching practices negatively impact students’ attitudes (e.g., Hasni & Potvin,
2015), Turkish school students’ attitudes towards science and mathematics yet are generally positive (Hatisaru,
2020b; Mullis, Martin, Foy & Hooper, 2016; Sjøberg & Schreiner, 2010). Students are interested in studying STEM
subjects at university (Kearney, 2016). STEM-related careers, especially engineering, are appealing to many students
(Ayar, 2015). Nevertheless, the number of graduates and new admissions in technical and quantitative fields have
been disproportionately low. In 2012, for example, 80 037 high school graduates entered various types of
engineering degree programs (e.g., mechanical, chemical, civil, petroleum, and computer) of which less than a half
graduated (36 786) (Ayar, 2015). Across the country, between 2013 and 2016, the percentage of STEM graduates
was only about 17%. The employment market projections for STEM occupations has been expected to be about
one million between 2016 and 2023, resulting in a shortfall of around 31% of this requirement (300 000) (Kivanc
et al., 2017).
While previous research has suggested that positive orientations towards STEM are fundamental to students’
entrance and persistence in, and completion of STEM-related fields (success), this study suggests that success is
based on various interrelated factors. The current paper offers additional empirical evidence exploring school
students’ STEM career intents by applying a theory which considers various aspect of career choice behaviours.
The paper contributes to understanding why students’ positive orientations to science, mathematics, and related
quantitative disciplines have not necessarily been translating into success. Theoretical underpinning follows this
section.
THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVE
One contemporary theoretical approach to individuals’ career interest is Lent et al.’s (1994) Social Cognitive
Career Theory (SCCT). SCCT represents a long-lasting effort to understand the mechanisms through which
individuals develop interests, make choices, succeed in educational and career pursuits (Lent et al., 1994). SCCT
has its root predominantly in Bandura’s (1986) general social cognitive theory, which suggests the ways in which
individuals, their behaviour, and environments affect one another. SCCT is a testable theory that attempts to
explain the behavioural (social cognitive) and other personal and environmental variables behind career interest,
choice, and performance. Several studies have utilised SSCT to explore how individuals develop occupational
pursuits, make and/or remake vocational choices, and achieve career success (Lent, 2005). It has been used in
STEM education for measuring, for example, high school (e.g., Bahar & Adiguzel, 2016) and college level (e.g.,
Lent, Sheu, Gloster, & Wilkins, 2010; Wang, 2013) students’ (involving adults, Sasson, 2020) dispositions and
career aspirations related to STEM. In this paper, SCCT conceptualisation was applied to describe the determinants
of lower secondary students’ STEM career intentions.
SCCT has two complementary aspects of theoretical analysis. The first aspect presents behavioural variables
that give individuals personal control in their career choice and development: self-efficacy, outcome expectations,
interests, and goals. The second aspect involves several other variables that affect individuals’ career-related
interests and choice behaviours such as personal history (e.g., gender, race, and pre-dispositions) and
environmental or contextual features (e.g., culture, educational climate, and particular learning experiences). SCCT
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posits that behavioural, environmental, and personal variables influence one another through complex, reciprocal
relations (Lent et al., 1994).
Self-efficacy appraisals are related to individuals’ response capabilities, i.e. “Can I do this?” (Lent et al., 1994, p.
83), that serving as an influential determinant of occupational behaviours. Among others, self-efficacy beliefs are
the most focal or pervading in the mechanism of human agency. Individuals do act or show perseverance in the
face of career-related difficulties, only if they believe they can produce desired outcomes by their actions. Thus,
efficacy beliefs play a central role in career choice and development not only in their own right, but also their
impact on other variables (Bandura et al., 2001). Outcome expectations are potent motivators and involve the
assumed results of performing certain prospective actions, i.e. “If I do this, what will happen?” (Lent et al., 1994,
p. 83). Lent et al. (1994) cited Bandura’s (1986) three types of outcomes expectations: physical (e.g., monetary);
social (e.g., approval of significant others); and self-evaluative (self-satisfaction). Lent et al. (2000) expanded the
theory in later years to include ultimate, distal outcome expectations that incline individuals toward a certain goal.
For example, one may want to become a doctor by being attracted to its prestige and opportunity to help people
that being a doctor is perceived as offering. According to Lent et al. (2000), these types of ultimate expectations
correspond Bandura’s self-evaluative or self-fulfilment expectations and help to sustain individuals along
challenging career paths towards their long-term career intents. Anticipated working conditions and reinforces
related to a particular career (e.g., favourable conditions) are additional distal outcome expectations that can be
bases for career interests or choices. These types of expectations sometimes can be long-term wishes such as
intending to major in a mathematics or science-related area believing that having in a degree in these fields allows
someone to earn relatively more (Lent et al., 2000).
Goals are expressed choices, aspirations, career plans, and decisions, i.e. “I intend to major in an engineering
field” (Lent et al., 2010, p. 390). By setting goals, individuals organise and guide their actions (e.g., attending
trainings related to their goal) to sustain their goals in the long run, sometimes even with little external support,
and to increase the chance of achieving the desired outcomes (Lent et al., 1994). Interests are patterns of likes and
dislikes with respect to career-relevant activities and jobs. They can be influenced by individuals’ career-relevant
abilities, and thus individuals’ career goals are likely to be prompted by their interests. For instance, one’s social
interests may lead to them to pursue a social-type vocation (Lent et al., 2000). According to SCCT, self-efficacy
and outcome expectations give rise to interests and that each of these variables, along with environmental factors,
help to shape educationally and vocationally relevant choices (Lent et al., 2010).
Environmental factors are both objective and subjective contextual influences. Objective aspects of the
environment include the quality of educational experiences, parental behaviours, peer influences, and economic
conditions (e.g., the financial support available to individuals for having career-related training) and can affect
peoples’ career choice or development (Lent et al., 2000). In their conceptualisation of the way of analysing student
success in the sciences and quantitative subjects – the Engagement, Capacity, and Continuity Trilogy (the ECC
Trilogy) – Jolly et al., (2004) underline the importance of objective contextual factors in career or academic success.
The authors suggest that continuation in career-related subjects towards careers in those fields (success) could only
be achieved within systems where individuals’ goals complement with their career-related capacity and necessary
resources are offered by the system.
The subjective environment refers to individual perceptions regarding opportunities, resources, or barriers that
are provided in a certain environment. For example, some individuals succeed in environments where very limited
resources available, while some fail in rich conditions. This relates to how they make sense of and respond to their
environments (Lent et al., 2000). SCCT categorises environmental variables according to their relative proximity
to the educational or career choice processes as: distal, background contextual influences; and proximal factors or
affordances. Distal, background contextual factors involve role model presence and opportunities for engaging in
particular academic or extracurricular activities. These factors can affect individuals’ learning experiences through
which their career-relevant self-efficacy and outcome expectations develop. Proximal contextual affordances (e.g.,
career network contacts) are important especially throughout active phases of career decision-making (Lent et al.,
2000). Parenthetically, this study of lower secondary school students’ career goals concentrates on distal, contextual
factors. SCCT hypothesises that environmental variables can directly influence or moderate individuals’ career-
relevant choices and associated actions. For example, an individual who perceives supportive environmental factors
(e.g., adequate support systems) is more likely to translate their career aspiration into a goal, and their goal into
related actions. Or an individual within a collectivist culture may prioritise the needs or preferences of others rather
than their own personal career wishes (Lent et al., 2000).
Although STEM dispositions have stimulated much research in Turkey, as in other parts of the world, the
critical theoretical ingredients of school students’ STEM career choice intentions have not necessarily been
incorporated into investigations. These efforts may fail to identify and mediate “the central variables that nurture
and sustain occupational interests and choices” (Lent et al., 2010, p. 387). The present study builds upon earlier
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research by including a more complete picture of Turkish school students’ interests and attitudes related to STEM
disciplines and careers, applying SCCT (Lent et al., 1994).
METHOD
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Data Analysis
Students’ responses to the open-ended item in the Survey were analysed by using both qualitative and
quantitative data analysis methods. The intended career choices were grouped into two: STEM and non-STEM
professions (see below). One Sample Chi-Square Test was utilised to test the statistical difference between the
observed frequencies in STEM and non-STEM career intentions. To test the statistical association between the
observed frequencies in STEM and non-STEM career intents (2 categories) and gender (2 categories), Fisher’s
Exact Test was used.
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Table 3. Means and standard deviations of attitudes towards STEM disciplines and career
N Minimum Maximum Mean Std. dev
Science 95 5.00 35.00 12.75 6.96
Mathematics 95 5.00 35.00 14.83 8.86
Engineering 95 5.00 35.00 16.51 8.98
Technology 95 5.00 35.00 14.58 8.84
Career 95 5.00 35.00 13.37 6.84
Valid N (listwise) 95
Table 4. Attitudes towards STEM disciplines and career correspond to IBV and group
IBV Group
Science 2.55 High
Mathematics 2.97 High
Engineering 3.30 Moderate
Technology 2.92 High
Career 2.67 High
Table 5. Independent Samples t Test comparing female and male students’ attitudes towards STEM disciplines
and career
n 𝑿𝑿 S Sd Sig P
Female 48 13.13 7.79
Science 91 .33 .744
Male 47 12.66 6.09
Female 48 15.18 8.77
Mathematics 91 .34 .732
Male 47 14.54 9.16
Female 48 19.71 8.35
Engineering 91 3.47 .001
Male 47 13.60 8.63
Female 48 16.89 8.39
Technology 91 2.43 .017
Male 47 12.53 8.89
Female 48 14.19 6.77
Career 91 1.01 .317
Male 47 12.75 6.97
two sub-variables: ‘career-relevant activity interest’ and ‘career-relevant self-efficacy’. Frequencies were calculated
and presented in Table 9 below.
RESULTS
An overview containing quantitative results regarding students’ attitudes towards STEM disciplines and careers
is given first. This is followed by an in-depth description of determinants of students’ career choice intentions
organised by the SSCT framework. The discussion of results follows this section.
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Table 6. Attitudes towards STEM disciplines and career correspond to IBV and group by gender
IBV Group
Female 2.63 High
Science
Male 2.53 High
Female 3.04 Moderate
Mathematics
Male 2.91 High
Female 3.94 Moderate
Engineering
Male 2.72 High
Female 3.38 Moderate
Technology
Male 2.55 High
Female 2.84 High
Career
Male 2.55 High
Students’ attitudes towards a STEM career were found to be the second most positive (Mean=13.37) (Table 3).
The differences between the means for female and male students’ attitudes towards a STEM career were statistically
insignificant (Table 5). Both females and males had high attitudes towards a STEM career (Table 6). Additional
statistical analyses confirmed students’ positive attitudes towards a STEM career (see the next section).
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Table 9. The frequency of student responses (f = 81) in SCCT variables
Expressed career goals Behavioural variables Sub-variables Frequency Total (%)
Career interest 12
Interests Career-related activity interest 12 30 (37.04%)
Career-related subject interest 6
STEM Ultimate wishes 11
Outcome expectations 12 (14.81%)
Long-term benefits 1
Career fit 3
Self-efficacy 4 (4.94%)
Career-relevant self-efficacy 1
Career interest 7
Interests Career-related activity interest 7 15 (18.52%)
Career-related subject interest 1
Ultimate wishes 10
Outcome expectations Favourable conditions 2 13 (16.05%)
Non-STEM
Financial benefit 1
Career-relevant capability 3
Career-relevant self-efficacy 2
Self-efficacy 7 (8.64%)
Aptitude for the career 1
Career fit 1
mentioned, the two drivers of Turkish culture were implicit in students’ career choice motives: altruism (f=12) and
patriotism (f=6). The most mentioned careers within this group were doctor (f=5), neurosurgeon (f=3), soldier
(f=3), psychologist (f=2), and mechanical engineering (f=2). Typical examples involved: “I want to become a psychologist,
because helping people makes me happy. I know some people who have psychological problems. When I help them, I feel good” (S55,
grade 8, girl); and “I want to become a mechanical engineer because I want to make helicopters, planes that is useful for our army,
country” (S71, grade 7, boy). One student wanted to become a mathematics teacher or a doctor because she wants
“to do useful work for the country” (S104, grade 7).
Some other statements of career choice reasons referred to self-efficacy (f=11, 13.58%). Career fit (f=4), career-
relevant self-efficacy (f=3) or capability (f=3), and aptitude for the career (f=1) were attributed with career
intentions by some students. Role model influence in the students’ career choice was negligible. Only in two
responses, a possible role model impact was detected. One student wrote: “Judge, to having the same profession with my
grandpa and dad and do a useful job for my country and people” (S13, grade 8, boy).
Figure 1 and Figure 2 show Wordle analysis of the expressed careers in student texts, categorised into two
groups: STEM and non-STEM professions. As depicted in Figure 1, the STEM professions most commonly
identified included doctor (f=12), computer engineer (f=8), architect (f=7), engineer (f=5), mechanical engineer
(f=5), and neurosurgeon (f=5). The most identified non-STEM professions were psychologist (f=5), policeman
(f=5), judge (f=4), and lawyer (f=4).
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This paper provides empirical support for claims about school students from developing countries having
positive orientations towards science and mathematics (e.g., Hatisaru, 2020b; Mullis et al., 2016; Sjøberg &
Schreiner, 2010; Thomas & Watters, 2015). Participant students from Turkey maintained highly positive attitudes
towards science, mathematics, technology and STEM careers, and moderate attitudes towards engineering. More
students expressed interest in pursuing STEM-related careers after high school than non-STEM careers. The
gender difference in students’ attitudes towards STEM disciplines and careers was negligible. Both female and male
students were highly positive towards science and mathematics. While male students were similarly highly positive
towards engineering and technology, female students were only moderately positive towards these two disciplines.
The gender difference in STEM orientation literature presents mixed results. While these findings regarding the
difference between female and male students’ attitudes towards STEM disciplines were consistent with Christensen
et al. (2014), Sadler et al. (2012) reported trends that female students were less likely to pursue STEM careers. Both
studies were undertaken in developed countries; in this study conducted in Turkey, females’ attitudes towards
STEM disciplines and careers were positive. In fact, in TIMSS 2015, grade eight Turkish female students performed
better than Turkish male students in science (Mullis, Martin, & Loveless, 2016).
This study highlights the possible influence of various factors related to when students make their educational
or career choices. SCCT posits the role and importance of behavioural variables including self-efficacy, interests,
outcome expectations, and goals in individuals’ career decisions. Overall, one of the critical determinants of the
participant students’ career intentions was interests. Several students associated their interests with a specific career
(e.g., mechanical engineering), or activities (e.g., making cars) and/or subjects (e.g., mathematics) related to that
career. The results revealed that outcome expectations may play somewhat different roles in students’ career choice
process. Potential long-term benefits such as professional income, which were only mentioned by a few lower
secondary students in this study, may be more influential on high school students’ career interests and choices
(Bahar & Adiguzel, 2016; Prieto & Dugar, 2017). While interests and outcome expectations were the main
motivations for students’ career choice after high school, consistent with previous research (e.g., Bandura et al.,
2001; Prieto & Dugar, 2017), students’ self-efficacy was also influential.
Where students expressed that it was their ultimate wish to choose a particular career, it was evident that societal
and/or cultural factors influenced their career intentions. SCCT elaborates on how larger, societal context can
influence career choice decisions. Specifically, several students’ responses revealed that they wanted to become a
doctor or psychologist to help others with their health or mental health issues. A few students wanted to assist the
army by becoming a soldier or mechanical engineer. Implicit in the motives of these students’ career choices are
two drivers of Turkish society, altruism, and patriotism (Evason, 2017), which highlights the possible societal
influence on their career goals. In the last Teaching and Learning International Survey (TALIS 2018), teachers across
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the world attributed altruistic motivations such as, “teaching allowed [me] to influence the development of children
and young people” for becoming a teacher (OECD, 2019, p. 123). Interestingly, in this study, few students (S9 and
S104) mentioned wanting to become a teacher. In Turkish society, although all professions are valued, a career in
medicine or engineering is viewed as more prestigious than a career in teaching. The students’ lack of interest in a
teaching career may again indicate that the context and social expectations influence students’ educational choices
(Bahar & Adiguzel, 2016).
In summary, the present study illustrates the suitability of the SCCT framework (Lent et al., 1994; 2000) for
investigating the determinants of school students’ STEM career intentions. According to SCCT, behavioural
variables shape individuals’ educational and occupational choices (Lent et al., 2010), and various important
contextual variables such as culture and educational climate impact on these behavioural variables (Lent et al.,
2000). Educational investments which take into consideration these variables have the potential to influence school
students’ attitudes towards and career choices in STEM. In particular, the influence of personal interests and
societal factors on students’ educational choices need to be considered in the development and implementation of
STEM initiatives that aiming to impact students’ orientations towards STEM.
Limitations
The aims of this paper were to investigate Turkish lower secondary students’ attitudes towards STEM
disciplines and careers, and the influence of behavioural, personal, and contextual variables on their career
intentions in STEM. Interests and ultimate wishes, or altruistic motives, have been highlighted as important
determinants of students’ career goals. Nevertheless, these findings are not an exact measure of the influence of,
for instance, early life experiences (Tai, Liu, Maltese, & Fan, 2006), academic achievement (Wang, 2013), perceived
classroom learning experiences (Lyons, 2006), or influence of role models (Sasson, 2020) involving parents and
teachers (Bahar & Adiguzel, 2016; Sjaastad, 2012). Answers to the open-ended item concerning the reasons of
expressed career goals, represent the students’ response at that point in time and within that classroom context. It
is not possible to measure the precise range of behavioural or environmental influences on student choice, and
intentions to pursue STEM careers may exist that were not mentioned by the students cannot be excluded. A
second limitation relating to external validity also exists. It is not known whether the determinants of the students’
career intentions found in this study are the result of the specific characteristics of students who participated in
this study, or whether they are representative of a general trend in the population from which the sample has been
drawn. Thus, the findings may not be generalisable to other schools in Ankara or to other regions in Turkey.
Further research in this area including different and more in-depth research instruments, can be applied to meet
these limitations. Nevertheless, the findings presented here provide valid and valuable insight into the motives that
lie behind school students’ career intentions in STEM. Together the quantitative data, students’ responses to open-
ended item, and the theoretical underpinnings of the research, all strengthen the validity of the study and to the
conclusions drawn.
Implications
The findings reveal that behavioural SCCT variables operate as guides and motivators of students’ career
intentions and point to several implications. The diminishing inclination of school students to pursue STEM-
related careers can be influenced by interventions that encompass and/or influence student interests. After school
programmes and initiatives that provide students informal learning experiences in STEM such as robotics summer
camps, media/toy design projects, and science fairs (e.g., Ayar, 2015; Gülgün, 2019; Karahan et al., 2015;
Sirinterlikci et al., 2019) demonstrate how such educational investments might work. Considering the likelihood
that educational experiences before high school may have an important influence on future occupational plans,
early exposure to the sciences can increase student competence and interest in STEM careers (Sasson, 2020; Tai et
al., 2006)
The attainment of STEM qualifications within Turkey’s young population is ultimately important to the
progress of the Turkish economy (Kivanc et al., 2017). As government aims to propel Turkey into the top ten
largest economies in the world by 2023 (Istanbul Chamber of Industry, 2016), the country needs to enhance its
competitiveness by building up its human resources (World Economic Forum, 2013). Even though students
attribute importance to mathematics and science learning (e.g., Hatisaru, 2020b; Mullis et al., 2016), and express
interest into studies in STEM (Ayar, 2015; Kearney, 2016), statistics show that the number of graduates and new
admissions in technical and quantitative fields remain disproportionately low (Ayar, 2015). The current attrition in
STEM degrees will ultimately result in skill shortages by 2023 (Kivanc et al., 2017). Student continuation in science
and quantitative disciplines and progression towards careers in these fields (i.e. success) can only be achieved within
an educational system where students’ goals complement their career-relevant knowledge and skills. To achieve
such a system, resources must be available at both institutional and programme level (Jolly et al., 2004). Effective
© 2021 by Author/s 11 / 15
Hatisaru / Theory-driven Determinants of School Students’ STEM Career Goals: A Preliminary Investigation
ways to transform students’ positive attitudes towards and interest in STEM disciplines and careers to success,
need to be understood and followed by comprehensive approaches to creating the environment for student success
(Jolly et al., 2004). It is especially important that students who commence university studies are better informed
about the knowledge and skills required for entering certain STEM fields (Prieto & Dugar, 2017). Career guidance
should be strengthened within the education system (Kearney, 2016), for “both to ensure that the country [in this
case Turkey] has the skills its needs for the economy and to enable young people to make the best choices to meet
their own future needs and aspirations” (Tripney et al., 2010).
This research has found the conceptualisation of behavioural, personal, and contextual factors in students’
STEM career goals based upon the SCCT framework proposed by Lent et al. (1994, 2000) useful, for capturing
the various ways in which these variables can be mediated to inspire school students’ academic choices. Future
research into STEM career interests and interventions needs to consider the contextual aspects of career choice
behaviours (Lent et al., 2000), as in this study they were found to be operating as guides for students’ future career
plans. For example, there has been a significant decline in undergraduate mathematics enrolments in Turkey
(Nesin, 2014), with the Council of Higher Education indicating that of the total undergraduate population (in 2019,
it was over 2 million), only 1.12% enrolled in a mathematics major in 2015. In 2016 and 2017, there was a dramatic
decline in enrolments (0.36% in 2016; 0.50% in 2017; 1.41% in 2018) possibly because in those years, mathematics
graduates were not entitled to become school mathematics teachers. This example indicates that employment
market conditions for mathematics graduates may influence students’ decisions about whether to study
mathematics and possibly their interest in mathematics.
The study reported here, in combination with the findings of the larger study (Hatisaru, in press), have
implications for future research. These combined results suggest, albeit tentatively, that students’ perceptions of
teaching and learning practices in mathematics classrooms in Turkey (teachers transmit information and
demonstrate correct solutions while students are passive recipients), play little role in the career intentions. This
finding stimulates further research focussed on investigating the ways in which classroom learning experiences
associate with the career choice process. Current research suggests that more open-ended and inquiry-based
methods of learning are important for both ‘screening’ students who are truly inclined and committed to STEM
disciplines (Thomas & Watters, 2015) and for improving the quality of learning and assisting studying STEM
subjects at university level (Kearney, 2016). Hence, a thorough understanding of the ways in which such perceived
teacher-centred instructional approaches affect educational choices and outcomes (e.g., Lyons, 2006) in the long
term is necessary.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I am grateful to the schools and students for participating in this study. I thank Ismail Yolcu and Emily Morgan
for their assistance in data collection and coding, and Ersoy Karabay for assisting with statistical analyses and
thoughtful conversations.
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APPENDIX A: Determinants of student career choice corresponding to SCCT variables
Behavioural
Goals Sub-variable Example
variables
Expressed Interests Career interest “Software developer or computer engineering because I am interested in.”
STEM/ (S83, grade 6, boy)
non-STEM “I want to study law and become a lawyer because it interests me.” (S43, grade
careers 8, girl)
Career-related activity “I will become a PE teacher because I like sport and want to make it my
interest profession.” (S27, grade 8, boy)
“Pilot because I like planes much and [being a pilot] is a proud for my country.
Painter, I have interest in paintings.” (S18, grade 8, girl)
Career-related subject “I want to become a doctor because I like science and maths very much and
interest feel happy when I succeed.” (S36, grade 8, girl)
“Engineering, I am interested in maths.” (S15, grade 8, girl)
Outcome Ultimate wishes “After high school I want to become a Neurosurgeon. I like helping people. I
expectations want, after a surgeon, seeing that person becomes well.” (S80, grade 6, girl)
“I want to be a Soldier because I want defending my land, people very much.”
(S98, grade 7, boy)
Favourable conditions “Public officer. Job conditions are convenient: off weekend, no stress.” (S90,
grade 7, boy)
Long-term benefits “After completing high school, I like to become a computer engineering,
which is a future profession and suits me.” (S22, grade 8, boy)
Financial benefit “I will become a judge because they earn well. And it is nice.” (S103, grade 7,
boy)
Self-efficacy Career fit “I want to be a psychologist or volleyball player because I find these
professions suitable for me.” (S63, grade 7, girl)
Career-relevant self- “Science teacher. I like science subject much and achieve. Veterinarian, I like
efficacy pets and think succeed it.” (S9, grade 8, girl)
Career-relevant “I want to become a basketball player. The reason is I am skilled in this area
capability and believe can make a good career.” (S37, grade 7, boy)
Aptitude for the career “Acting because I am good at memorising and I want to.” (S102, grade 7, girl)
© 2021 by Author/s 15 / 15