Engineering climate for marginalized groups: Connections to peer relations and engineering identity

IF 3.9 2区 工程技术 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Susannah C. Davis, Susan Bobbitt Nolen, Naeun Cheon, Elba Moise, Eric William Hamilton
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background

A better understanding of departmental climate and its relationship to engineering identity is needed to diversify engineering and improve marginalized students' experiences.

Purpose/Hypothesis

We investigated whether undergraduate engineering students from 16 social identity groups perceived departmental climate differently from one another and examined psychological and behavioral factors contributing to these perceptions and their relationship to engineering identification.

Design/Method

We surveyed 398 undergraduate engineering students about departmental climate and engineering identity, testing structural models across race and gender. Qualitative analysis of open-ended items complemented quantitative results.

Results

Students rated climate for dominant identities (White, male, and/or US-born) as more welcoming than for 14 nondominant identities, broadening the notion of “nondominant” identities in engineering. In structural models, invariant across race and gender, students' perceptions of bias, safety, and faculty support predicted climate ratings; peer relations and microaggressions predicted engineering identity. There were mean differences in perceptions across intersections of race and gender, but students in all groups perceived a climate gap favoring dominant identities. Open-ended responses highlighted students' desire for a more diverse, inclusive program and the importance of peer relations.

Conclusions

Departmental climate can be less welcoming for engineering students with many different nondominant identities. Attending to both students' own social positioning and their perceptions of climate for other students can open opportunities for change in engineering departments. Results suggest that efforts to improve peer relations in group work could be important in promoting disciplinary identification in historically marginalized groups.

边缘化群体的工程环境:与同伴关系和工程身份的联系
背景需要更好地了解部门氛围及其与工程身份的关系,以使工程多样化,改善边缘化学生的体验。目的/假设我们调查了来自16个社会身份群体的工程本科生对部门氛围的感知是否不同,并考察了促成这些感知的心理和行为因素及其与工程身份的关系。设计/方法我们对398名工科本科生进行了关于系内气候和工程身份的调查,测试了不同种族和性别的结构模型。对开放项目的定性分析补充了定量结果。结果学生们将主导身份(白人、男性和/或美国出生)的氛围评为比14种非主导身份更受欢迎,拓宽了工程中“非主导”身份的概念。在跨种族和性别不变的结构模型中,学生对偏见、安全和教师支持的看法预测了气候评级;同伴关系和微侵犯预测了工程身份。种族和性别交叉点的认知存在平均差异,但所有群体的学生都认为气候差异有利于主导身份。开放式回答强调了学生对更多样化、更具包容性的课程的渴望以及同伴关系的重要性。结论对于具有许多不同非主导身份的工科学生来说,系里的气氛可能不那么受欢迎。关注学生自身的社会定位和他们对其他学生气候的看法,可以为工程系的变革打开机会。研究结果表明,努力改善小组工作中的同伴关系对于促进历史上被边缘化群体的学科认同可能很重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Engineering Education
Journal of Engineering Education 工程技术-工程:综合
CiteScore
12.20
自引率
11.80%
发文量
47
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Engineering Education (JEE) serves to cultivate, disseminate, and archive scholarly research in engineering education.
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