[OC] Women face greater Imposter Syndrome than Men, when starting Software Engineering Degrees, despite having similar high school averages
Submitted by GeorgeDaGreat123 t3_zvm53x in dataisbeautiful
Reply to comment by GeorgeDaGreat123 in [OC] Women face greater Imposter Syndrome than Men, when starting Software Engineering Degrees, despite having similar high school averages by GeorgeDaGreat123
Why did you focus on highschool grades? They represent nothing of value for how good someone can do as software engineer.
They are first year students.
Okay then I have to ask, how can someone who is an absolute noob in their field of study have imposter syndrome?
Knowing next to nothing is basically the definition of what is expected of you.
Yes, thank you for the comment. I agree confidence level would have been a better word choice.
I would actually not use the term confidence level in the chart since that has a statistical meaning and could be confusing. Maybe confidence in ability or something more descriptive
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It's a measure of their confidence, not necessarily what they know.
Then it should be called that, because not being confident and imposter syndrome are two different things.
They're very similar things.
Not really… coming from someone who has experienced imposter syndrome.
“Confidence is about what we can and can't do. Imposter Syndrome is about who we think we are.”
Imposter syndrome makes you feel like a fraud or you don’t belong. It has nothing to do with what you feel you can and can’t do.
>Imposter syndrome makes you feel like a fraud or you don’t belong.
A first year student can have those same feelings: "am I good enough to be at this school? I'm not as smart as all these other students."
Nope.
Have a good day.
Nice one. Enjoy that level of ignorance for the rest of your life. It’ll serve you well.
In this setting, imposter syndrome would focus around the students not believing they are smart enough, given the school environment. You are the one being ignorant.
Then it’s not imposter syndrome, it’s a lack of confidence. Imposter syndrome is knowing you can do something but feeling like you don’t belong there.
Impostor syndrome is the internal psychological experience of feeling like a phony in some area of your life, despite any success that you have achieved in that area
This is a graph showing people who believe they don't belong (feeling like a phony), despite the success they have achieved (high academic grades).
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