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Christy A. WalkerAssistant DirectorUniversity Career Services
The Impostor Syndrome: Helping Students to Face their Fears
and Finish Strong
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“I feel like an impostor here with all these really bright people.”
“I feel like a fraud”
“If I'm so successful, why do I feel like a fake?”
“I am not as good as other people think I am, and I have them fooled now but I may be ‘found out’ later.”
"Obviously I'm in this position because my abilities have been overestimated."
“I did not want people to think I thought I was something I was not.”
“My family expects me to make some massive impact upon this world and I live in constant fear of disappointing them.”
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Background
• Assistant Director - UNC University Career Services • Former UNC Academic Advisor• STEM Graduate• Doctoral Student
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Session Goals • Define Imposter Syndrome• Detail characteristics of Imposter Syndrome• Identify student issues • Discuss– How to support and empower student – Support services – Implications – Best Practices
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What is the Impostor Syndrome?
… an intense feeling of intellectual inauthenticity that is frequentlyexperienced by high-achieving individuals
--- Clance and Imes, 1978
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What is the Impostor Syndrome (IP)?• Researchers Pauline Clance and Suzanne Imes
• “Fear of Failure”
• Sometimes known as “impostor phenomenon”
• Origin – graduate students
• Common in graduate students, transfers, underrepresented populations, adult learners
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Clance IP Scale & Harvey’s IP ScaleBoth scales contain items that identify :• Fear of failure• Attribution of success to luck, error, or charm• The desire to stand out• The feeling of having given others a false impression
Clance’s scale includes measures that identify: • Fear of evaluation• Fear that successes cannot be repeated• The feeling that one is less capable than peers
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Characteristics of Impostor Syndrome
• “The cycle”• Introversion• Fear of Evaluation• Fear of Failure• Guilt about success• Difficulty in accepting
positive feedback
• Anxiety• Overestimating others while
underestimating oneself• Skewed definition of
intelligence• False family messages
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Impostor Syndrome Shows Up As…
• Lack of self-confidence• Low self-esteem• Depression/anxiety• Suicidal thoughts• Increased drop out rates
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Impact of Impostor Syndrome on…• Women • Graduate students• Minorities/Underrepresented students• STEM students • Transfer students• Adult students
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Women• Women may be more likely than men to experience
impostor behaviors • Family messages• Societal messages• Gender socialization
• Some women choose to hide their own opinions
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Graduate Students • Seen as “higher achievers” in literature
• More likely to self-sabotage their efforts
• Greatest fear is failure
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Minorities/Underrepresented• Cultural Suicide brings to mind cultural conflicts (i.e., "acting White,"
"putting on airs") experienced by people of color.
– Cultural suicide happens to learners "who are in the critical process and who are seen by those around them to be reinventing themselves" and are at risk of being ostracized (Brookfield, 2005).
• Tinto’s (1993) framework emphasizes the importance of social integration (i.e., participation in campus activities, interaction with peers).
• Carpenter (1991) contends that international students often face a particular set of transfer problems in the transfer process that are caused by cultural differences.
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STEM & Underrepresented Students
Four sets of factors necessary to enhance minority students’ success in STEM• Academic and social integration• Knowledge and skill development• Support and motivation• Monitoring and advising
-- Maton, Hrabowski, & Schmitt, 2000
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Transfer Students
• Students commonly reported a "self-reliant" role in transfer process
• Self- reliant because they perceived that institutions failed to communicate with them
• “Survival of the fittest“ attitude toward community college students
Barbara Townsend - perceptions among transfer students that relate to IP:
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Adult LearnersFour emotional states within adult learners: • Impostorship • Cultural Suicide• Loss of innocence• Peer support- students feel a need to belong to
an emotionally sustaining learning community of peers
-- Brookfield , 2005
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Resources• Mentoring programs• Transfer services• Alumni network• Leadership development programs• Civic engagement • Academic advising• Career services• Counseling services – a key referral!• Others
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How to address the Impostor Syndrome1. Break the silence
2. Separate feelings from fact
3. Recognize when you should feel fraudulent
4. Accentuate the positive
5. Develop a new response to failure and mistake making
6. Right the rules
7. Develop a new script
8. Visualize success
9. Reward yourself
10. Fake it ‘til you make it
--- Dr. Valerie Youngwww.impostorsyndrome.com
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Closing Thoughts
Christy A. WalkerAssistant Director
University Career ServicesUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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ReferencesBrookfield, S. D. (2005), Overcoming impostorship, cultural suicide, and lost innocence:
Implications for teaching critical thinking in the community college. New Directions for Community Colleges, 2005: 49–57.
Clance, P. R., & Imes, S. A. (1978). The impostor phenomenon in high-achieving women: Dynamics and therapeutic intervention. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, and Practice, 15, 241-247.
Clance, P.R. & O'Toole, M.A. (1987). Impostor phenomenon: An internal barrier to empowerment and Achievement. Women and Therapy, 6, 51-64.
King, J. E., & Cooley, E. L. (1995). Achievement orientation and the impostor phenomenon among college students. Contemporary Educational Psychology, 20, 304-312.
Kolligan, J. Jr. (1991). Perceived fraudulence in young adults: Is there an "impostor syndrome"? Journal of Personality Assessment, 56, 308-326.
Maton, K.I., Hrabowski, F.A. III, & Schmitt, C.L. (2000). African-American college students excelling in the sciences: College and post-college outcomes in the Meyerhoff Scholars Program. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 37, 629-654
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Web References
• Dr. Valerie Young – The Secret Thoughts of Successful Women – impostorsyndrome.com
• Pauline Rose Clance – paulineroseclance.com – Impostor Phenomenon Reference List