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Resumen de The importance of formative experiences for engineering student identity

Kerry L. Meyers, Matthew W. Ohland, Alice L. Pawley, Cody D. Christopherson

  • The motivation for the current study was to examine the experiences that contribute to engineering identity both in terms of educationaland professional pathways; this was accomplished through both qualitative and quantitative means. A cross-sectional study ofundergraduate engineering students was conducted at a medium-sized Midwestern private university. A large-scale survey of allundergraduate engineering students, ~1100, yielded responses from ~700 students during the spring of 2009. Survey questions werebased on a study approach defining adulthood by Jeffrey Arnett, but specifically applied to engineering identity as a parallel but uniqueinstrument. Engineering identity from a student perspective was assessed, both in terms of self-identification (do engineering studentsconsider themselves to be engineers?) and identifying factors that are ‘‘necessary’’ to be considered an engineer. A qualitative inquiryfollowed to better inform the quantitative survey results. Individual student interviews across class levels and engineering self-identifications were conducted as a collection of case studies. While it was not surprising to find that individual student experiencescontribute to an overall sense of belonging to the college, it was interesting that key experiences such as internships and undergraduateresearch were not found to be statistically significant predictors of engineer self-identification. Student interviews offered insight intothis finding; those experiences were formative, but there is a bi-directionality to these experiences–they can be either affirming ordiscouraging. Students cited experiences that were positive, challenging learning opportunities as reaffirming their engineering identityas it relates to future career plans. Conversely, negative student experiences were also formative but were related to non-identificationand dissuaded students from future engineering related career plans. Finally, the implications for an institution’s curricular structure asit relates to engineering identity are discussed as are suggestions for promoting multiple student experiences before graduation andformal assessment of those experiences.


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