Table 1.
Rationale for including each of the eight concealable stigmatized identities, including evidence of discrimination or attrition and disadvantage or stigma for each.
Table 2.
Participant demographic information.
Fig 1.
Gender differences between men and women in reporting concealable stigmatized identities.
A) Percent of men (purple) and women (yellow) who reported having each concealable stigmatized identity. B) Logistic regression results demonstrate that women are more likely to report having depression, anxiety, or a disability but less likely to report being a first-generation college student or transferred from a community college. Points to the right of the vertical dashed line indicate women are more likely than men to report the identity; confidence intervals which do not cross the line are statistically significant.
Fig 2.
Gender differences between men and women in revealing concealable stigmatized identities.
A) Percent of men and women who reveal a concealable stigmatized identity (aggregate) to all, some, or none of their undergraduate students. B) Women are more likely than men to reveal a CSI to some (compared to none) of their undergraduates; no significant difference between men and women for revealing to all (compared to none) of their undergraduates. C) Multinomial logistic regression results for revealing each identity for women compared to men (disaggregated); points to the right of the dashed vertical line indicate women are more likely than men to reveal the identity to some (teal) or all (pink) undergraduates (compared to no undergraduates) and confidence intervals which do not cross the dashed line and are darker are statistically significant.
Fig 3.
Gender differences between men and women’s perceived stigma for each concealable stigmatized identity A) by percentage and B) based on ordinal regressions. All confidence intervals do not cross the vertical line and are statistically significant; points to the right of the line indicate women rated the stigma associated with the identity higher than men.