Using Positioning Theory to Study the Role of Emotions in Engineering Problem Solving: Methodological Issues and Recommendations for Future Research

Background: Engineering is often portrayed as a purely rational discipline, where emotions are considered irrelevant to problem solving. Also, in-depth research on emotions in engineering education is scarce, and most of the existing studies take their theoretical departure in individual and cogniti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Johanna Lönngren, Tom Adawi, Maria Berge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: VT Publishing 2021-07-01
Series:Studies in Engineering Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.seejournal.org/articles/50
id doaj-7ba1deb1bd1f472ebeba49b64d8770d0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7ba1deb1bd1f472ebeba49b64d8770d02021-09-13T08:55:06ZengVT PublishingStudies in Engineering Education2690-54502021-07-012110.21061/see.5025Using Positioning Theory to Study the Role of Emotions in Engineering Problem Solving: Methodological Issues and Recommendations for Future ResearchJohanna Lönngren0Tom Adawi1Maria Berge2Umeå UniversityChalmers University of TechnologyUmeå UniversityBackground: Engineering is often portrayed as a purely rational discipline, where emotions are considered irrelevant to problem solving. Also, in-depth research on emotions in engineering education is scarce, and most of the existing studies take their theoretical departure in individual and cognitivist perspectives. There is thus a need for emotion research from social interactionist perspectives—such as positioning theory. Purpose: This methodological paper aims to (1) develop an analytical framework for studying emotions through positioning theory and multimodal analysis, (2) illustrate its use in engineering education research, and (3) discuss methodological issues and offer recommendations for this type of research in engineering education. Method: To develop the analytical framework, we engaged with philosophical and empirical literature on positioning theory and emotions, as well as empirical data from a pilot study on engineering students’ emotional positioning in individual, video-recorded interviews about a wicked sustainability problem. We illustrate the application of the framework and multimodal analysis using three extracts from that data. In line with positioning theory, the analysis focuses on how emotional moral orders are activated and negotiated. Three units of analysis are used: emotion acts, emotional storylines, and emotional positions. Results: The analysis shows how a dominant storyline of engineering as purely rational can be reconstructed, but also how a competing storyline of emotions as important for engineering can be constructed, sometimes simultaneously. These findings disrupt simplified narratives about engineers as unemotional and show that there are multiple ways of engaging with emotions in engineering problem solving. Conclusions: We conclude that positioning theory holds much potential for exploring a wide range of social interactional phenomena in engineering education. More research is needed to explore additional types, levels, and orders of emotional positioning to further nuance our understanding of the role of emotions in engineering education.https://www.seejournal.org/articles/50positioning theorymoral ordersemotionsmultimodal analysissustainabilitywicked problems
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johanna Lönngren
Tom Adawi
Maria Berge
spellingShingle Johanna Lönngren
Tom Adawi
Maria Berge
Using Positioning Theory to Study the Role of Emotions in Engineering Problem Solving: Methodological Issues and Recommendations for Future Research
Studies in Engineering Education
positioning theory
moral orders
emotions
multimodal analysis
sustainability
wicked problems
author_facet Johanna Lönngren
Tom Adawi
Maria Berge
author_sort Johanna Lönngren
title Using Positioning Theory to Study the Role of Emotions in Engineering Problem Solving: Methodological Issues and Recommendations for Future Research
title_short Using Positioning Theory to Study the Role of Emotions in Engineering Problem Solving: Methodological Issues and Recommendations for Future Research
title_full Using Positioning Theory to Study the Role of Emotions in Engineering Problem Solving: Methodological Issues and Recommendations for Future Research
title_fullStr Using Positioning Theory to Study the Role of Emotions in Engineering Problem Solving: Methodological Issues and Recommendations for Future Research
title_full_unstemmed Using Positioning Theory to Study the Role of Emotions in Engineering Problem Solving: Methodological Issues and Recommendations for Future Research
title_sort using positioning theory to study the role of emotions in engineering problem solving: methodological issues and recommendations for future research
publisher VT Publishing
series Studies in Engineering Education
issn 2690-5450
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Background: Engineering is often portrayed as a purely rational discipline, where emotions are considered irrelevant to problem solving. Also, in-depth research on emotions in engineering education is scarce, and most of the existing studies take their theoretical departure in individual and cognitivist perspectives. There is thus a need for emotion research from social interactionist perspectives—such as positioning theory. Purpose: This methodological paper aims to (1) develop an analytical framework for studying emotions through positioning theory and multimodal analysis, (2) illustrate its use in engineering education research, and (3) discuss methodological issues and offer recommendations for this type of research in engineering education. Method: To develop the analytical framework, we engaged with philosophical and empirical literature on positioning theory and emotions, as well as empirical data from a pilot study on engineering students’ emotional positioning in individual, video-recorded interviews about a wicked sustainability problem. We illustrate the application of the framework and multimodal analysis using three extracts from that data. In line with positioning theory, the analysis focuses on how emotional moral orders are activated and negotiated. Three units of analysis are used: emotion acts, emotional storylines, and emotional positions. Results: The analysis shows how a dominant storyline of engineering as purely rational can be reconstructed, but also how a competing storyline of emotions as important for engineering can be constructed, sometimes simultaneously. These findings disrupt simplified narratives about engineers as unemotional and show that there are multiple ways of engaging with emotions in engineering problem solving. Conclusions: We conclude that positioning theory holds much potential for exploring a wide range of social interactional phenomena in engineering education. More research is needed to explore additional types, levels, and orders of emotional positioning to further nuance our understanding of the role of emotions in engineering education.
topic positioning theory
moral orders
emotions
multimodal analysis
sustainability
wicked problems
url https://www.seejournal.org/articles/50
work_keys_str_mv AT johannalonngren usingpositioningtheorytostudytheroleofemotionsinengineeringproblemsolvingmethodologicalissuesandrecommendationsforfutureresearch
AT tomadawi usingpositioningtheorytostudytheroleofemotionsinengineeringproblemsolvingmethodologicalissuesandrecommendationsforfutureresearch
AT mariaberge usingpositioningtheorytostudytheroleofemotionsinengineeringproblemsolvingmethodologicalissuesandrecommendationsforfutureresearch
_version_ 1717381193629958144