SUSAN S. SILBEY | Current Research / Projects
DEVELOPING DIVERSE LEADERSHIP FOR ENGINEERING
A six year longitudinal study of students at four schools designed
to understand the conditions that encourage or discourage persistance
in engineering education.
Research Group | Project
Summary | Links
RESEARCH GROUP
Carroll Seron, co-PI, Baruch CUNY
In NYC:
Gina Louise Sciarra
Angela Evosevic
Anne Dalgish
Jean Bucaria (2002-2004)
In Amherst Massachusetts:
Richard Berman
Tim Goddard
Ingrid Seaman
Penelope Dane
Catherine Wilson
In Boston:
Ayn Cavicchi
Brian Rubineau
Heather McIndoe
Esra Ozkan
Will Taggart
PROJECT SUMMARY
From a variety of sources, a persistent set of issues has posed a
challenge to the profession of engineering. Rapid technological changes
require that engineers learn to think more flexibly, to work in teams,
to appreciate the importance of entrepreneurial creativity, and to
incorporate social skill and poise into one’s professional toolkit.
The complexities of ensuring a safe and protected environment for future
generations requires that engineering give renewed attention to the
importance of the profession’s social responsibilities. Equally,
the profession continues to face enormous challenges to ensure gender
and racial equity and representation. While these are not altogether
new challenges to the profession, two new models in engineering education
at Smith College and Olin College of Engineering have given them renewed
attention. Will these new models of engineering education produce a
different kind of productive and responsible engineer and, further,
do these programs pose a challenge to the dominant institutional models
of engineering education exemplified by private, elite engineering
institutions such as MIT or the land-grant tradition of engineering
education represented by the University of Massachusetts at Amherst?
This study joins research on neo-institutional theory with research
on theories of professional socialization to explore these questions.
Research from the neo-institutional perspective, suggests that despite
the effort to innovate, Smith and Olin are likely to develop programs
that are isomorphic with the existing institutions. Despite efforts to
hire and retain “non-traditional” professionals, the faculty
at Smith and Olin, socialized and educated in the dominant, institutional
culture of engineering, are likely to mimic and replicate the values,
pedagogies, professional orientations, and taken-for-granted assumptions
of conventional engineering through their teaching. If these institutionalist
hypotheses are validated, then women and minorities from these schools
will find it no easier to navigate successful patterns of professionalization
than in the conventional programs.
There is research on professonal disposition to suggest, however, that
students do not enter the academy as a blank slate and that students at
Smith, Olin, MIT and UMass pick the school they attend because it “fits” their
professional value orientations. These new institutions offer a different
engineering script and thus will attract a different engineering students.
Thus, it is likely that students with a positive predisposition toward
the value orientations of their respective programs will experience success
in the program and will persist in the profession. However, where the
program’s culture does not “fit” the student’s
predisposition, there will be a tendency toward departure.
A student’s professional identity may, however, be much more fluid
than theories of either professional socialization or predisposition suggest.
The steps to becoming an engineer are multifaceted; students are expected
to become experts in a substantive area, feel confident in their abilities,
able to work with other peers in team-based projects, capable of communicating
effectively to potential clients or supervisors, and committed to the
values and goals of their professional calling. The trajectory of acquiring
this range of understandings may be uneven and engender multiple identities,
depending on time, place, and local institutional culture.
To address these questions, we are following a cohort of students at
these four programs for five years, from their first year of college to
their first year of employment and/or graduate study. The goal of this
investigation is to develop a rich, multifaceted understanding of how
students become professional engineers. We are collecting data through
four methods: (1) a web-based survey of a random sample of first year
engineering and a control group of liberal arts students at all four institutions;
(2) observations of orientation sessions, classroom interactions, and
large convocations; (3) diaries written at least twice monthly by at least
ten students at each school; (4) indepth, open ended interviews with at
least 25 students as well as similar interviews with faculty and administrators
at each school.
LINKS
http://www.futurepaths.org/
|