The Influence of Professional Engineering Organizations on Women and Underrepresented Minority Students’ Fit

Our work focuses on women and underrepresented minority (URM) students’ cultural models of engineering success (CMES) or beliefs about doing well in engineering. Because of its consequential effect on persistence, we pay special attention to the fit domain of CMES—student feelings of belonging in th...

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Published in:Frontiers in Education
Main Authors: Rebecca Campbell-Montalvo, Gladis Kersaint, Chrystal A. S. Smith, Ellen Puccia, Oxana Sidorova, Hannah Cooke, Hesborn Wao, Julie P. Martin, John Skvoretz, George MacDonald, Reginald Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-01-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feduc.2021.755471/full
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author Rebecca Campbell-Montalvo
Gladis Kersaint
Chrystal A. S. Smith
Ellen Puccia
Oxana Sidorova
Hannah Cooke
Hesborn Wao
Julie P. Martin
John Skvoretz
George MacDonald
Reginald Lee
author_facet Rebecca Campbell-Montalvo
Gladis Kersaint
Chrystal A. S. Smith
Ellen Puccia
Oxana Sidorova
Hannah Cooke
Hesborn Wao
Julie P. Martin
John Skvoretz
George MacDonald
Reginald Lee
author_sort Rebecca Campbell-Montalvo
collection DOAJ
container_title Frontiers in Education
description Our work focuses on women and underrepresented minority (URM) students’ cultural models of engineering success (CMES) or beliefs about doing well in engineering. Because of its consequential effect on persistence, we pay special attention to the fit domain of CMES—student feelings of belonging in their engineering program. We examine 1) how student fit is affected by participatory social capital (i.e., participation in professional engineering organizations [PEOs] that have as part of their mission a goal to assist students in their STEM education and careers), as well as 2) the factors that affect students’ decisions to participate in PEOs. Due to the traditional prioritization of majority norms in engineering programs, women and URM students’ CMES may conflict with the cultures manifested in engineering departments. Analysis of interviews with 55 women and URM engineering students shows that PEOs, particularly gender- and race-focused PEOs, affect students’ feelings of fit. PEOs affect student fit positively and primarily through expressive social capital—emotional support wherein students feel they fit in because PEOs provide a sense of community and opportunities to be around successful women and URM engineers. PEOs also allow students to build instrumental social capital, such as academic and professional skills, including networking and knowledge development. Encouragement from others and their desire to be around people like themselves played a central role in students joining PEOs. However, students identified time, financial, and fit issues that discouraged them from participating in PEOs. This investigation illuminates how socially distant others from PEOs affect student fit, extending previous work which uncovered how more proximal others affect fit as well as previous work finding that URM students participating in PEOs were more likely to persist in their engineering program. Research, theory, and practice applications are presented.
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spelling doaj-art-6997c7bc12ed4bd693029ecb2a2bccca2025-08-19T21:01:43ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Education2504-284X2022-01-01610.3389/feduc.2021.755471755471The Influence of Professional Engineering Organizations on Women and Underrepresented Minority Students’ FitRebecca Campbell-Montalvo0Gladis Kersaint1Chrystal A. S. Smith2Ellen Puccia3Oxana Sidorova4Hannah Cooke5Hesborn Wao6Julie P. Martin7John Skvoretz8George MacDonald9Reginald Lee10Department of Curriculum and Instruction, University of Connecticut, Mansfield, CT, United StatesDepartment of Curriculum and Instruction, University of Connecticut, Mansfield, CT, United StatesDepartment of Anthropology, University of Connecticut, Mansfield, CT, United StatesBeta Research Associates, Palmetto, FL, United StatesEl Instituto, University of Connecticut, Mansfield, CT, United StatesDepartment of Curriculum and Instruction, University of Connecticut, Mansfield, CT, United StatesDepartment of Curriculum and Instruction, University of Connecticut, Mansfield, CT, United StatesDepartment of Engineering Education, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United StatesDepartment of Sociology, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United StatesThe MacDonald Research Institute, Wesley Chapel, FL, United StatesUniversity of South Florida, Tampa, FL, United StatesOur work focuses on women and underrepresented minority (URM) students’ cultural models of engineering success (CMES) or beliefs about doing well in engineering. Because of its consequential effect on persistence, we pay special attention to the fit domain of CMES—student feelings of belonging in their engineering program. We examine 1) how student fit is affected by participatory social capital (i.e., participation in professional engineering organizations [PEOs] that have as part of their mission a goal to assist students in their STEM education and careers), as well as 2) the factors that affect students’ decisions to participate in PEOs. Due to the traditional prioritization of majority norms in engineering programs, women and URM students’ CMES may conflict with the cultures manifested in engineering departments. Analysis of interviews with 55 women and URM engineering students shows that PEOs, particularly gender- and race-focused PEOs, affect students’ feelings of fit. PEOs affect student fit positively and primarily through expressive social capital—emotional support wherein students feel they fit in because PEOs provide a sense of community and opportunities to be around successful women and URM engineers. PEOs also allow students to build instrumental social capital, such as academic and professional skills, including networking and knowledge development. Encouragement from others and their desire to be around people like themselves played a central role in students joining PEOs. However, students identified time, financial, and fit issues that discouraged them from participating in PEOs. This investigation illuminates how socially distant others from PEOs affect student fit, extending previous work which uncovered how more proximal others affect fit as well as previous work finding that URM students participating in PEOs were more likely to persist in their engineering program. Research, theory, and practice applications are presented.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feduc.2021.755471/fullsocial capitalbelongingSTEM-Science Technology Engineering Mathematicswomenblack students
spellingShingle Rebecca Campbell-Montalvo
Gladis Kersaint
Chrystal A. S. Smith
Ellen Puccia
Oxana Sidorova
Hannah Cooke
Hesborn Wao
Julie P. Martin
John Skvoretz
George MacDonald
Reginald Lee
The Influence of Professional Engineering Organizations on Women and Underrepresented Minority Students’ Fit
social capital
belonging
STEM-Science Technology Engineering Mathematics
women
black students
title The Influence of Professional Engineering Organizations on Women and Underrepresented Minority Students’ Fit
title_full The Influence of Professional Engineering Organizations on Women and Underrepresented Minority Students’ Fit
title_fullStr The Influence of Professional Engineering Organizations on Women and Underrepresented Minority Students’ Fit
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Professional Engineering Organizations on Women and Underrepresented Minority Students’ Fit
title_short The Influence of Professional Engineering Organizations on Women and Underrepresented Minority Students’ Fit
title_sort influence of professional engineering organizations on women and underrepresented minority students fit
topic social capital
belonging
STEM-Science Technology Engineering Mathematics
women
black students
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feduc.2021.755471/full
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