Impact of Digital Mentorship on WomeninSTEM

Autores/as

  • Douglas Adalberto Aguilar Montoya Universidad Evangélica de El Salvador
  • Wendy Stephanie Martinez Almendares Universidad Evangélica de El Salvador

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18687/LEIRD2025.1.1.1103

Palabras clave:

Virtual mentoring, STEM, Academic retention, Gender gap, Higher education, Latin America

Resumen

Female student dropout in STEM disciplines constitutes a structural problem in Latin America, with rates of 45% during the first two years of engineering. This study analyzes the impact of virtual mentoring programs on the academic retention of women in STEM careers (2020–2024). Through a longitudinal analysis of 1,247 students across 15 universities in 8 Latin American countries, three models of virtual mentoring were evaluated: peer-to-peer, professional-to-student, and group mentoring. The results show that participants in digital mentoring demonstrated 23% higher academic retention (78.4% vs. 55.1%) compared to the control group. In El Salvador, where women represent only 17% of graduates in engineering and technology, students engaged in digital mentoring recorded a 31% increase in academic retention. The hybrid peer-to-peer model combined with professional mentoring proved most effective in the early years. Virtual mentoring represents a scalable and cost-effective strategy to reduce the gender gap in STEM.

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Publicado

2025-12-12

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Articles

Cómo citar

Aguilar Montoya, D. A., & Martinez Almendares, W. S. (2025). Impact of Digital Mentorship on WomeninSTEM. LACCEI, 2(13). https://doi.org/10.18687/LEIRD2025.1.1.1103

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