Kinoshita, Timothy J.Knight, David B.Borrego, Maura JenkinsBortz, Whitney E. Wall2020-08-262020-08-262020-04-291932-6203e0231567http://hdl.handle.net/10919/99855This study examines differences across demographic subgroups in the phenomenon of recent doctoral recipients seeking work but having no job offers for employment. Gender and race/ethnicity have been identified as two characteristics with considerable issues of representation in a number of science and engineering fields, particularly at the doctoral level. Using the NSF Survey of Earned Doctorates dataset, which includes over 298,000 respondents in the biological sciences, engineering, and physical sciences since 1977, we use logistic regression modelling to examine the likelihood of doctoral recipients having no offers at the time of graduation as a function of race, gender, family and funding variables. We find that across the fields of biology, engineering, and physical sciences, women and underrepresented minorities have a higher prevalence of having no job offers, but this relationship has notable interaction effects for family variables and doctoral program funding mechanism. Importantly, marital status accounts for differences in job offers between genders that deserves further exploration.application/pdfenCreative Commons Attribution 4.0 InternationalIlluminating systematic differences in no job offers for STEM doctoral recipientsArticle - RefereedPLoS Onehttps://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.023156715432348344