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What Do Schoolgirls Think of Engineering? A Critique of Conversations from a Participatory Research Approach
Author(s) -
Jane Andrews,
Robin Clark
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--23300
Subject(s) - interview , citizen journalism , economic shortage , perception , qualitative research , engineering education , pedagogy , psychology , sociology , engineering , social science , computer science , government (linguistics) , mechanical engineering , linguistics , philosophy , neuroscience , world wide web , anthropology
Whilst statistics vary, putting the percentage of women engineers at between 6%[1] and 9% [2] of the UK Engineering workforce, what cannot be disputed is that there is a need to attract more young women into the profession. Building on previous work which examined why engineering continues to fail to attract high numbers of young women[3,4] and starting with the research question "What do High School girls think of engineering as a future career and study choice?", this paper critiques research conducted utilising a participatory approach[5] in which twenty semi-structured in depth interviews were conducted by two teenage researchers with High School girls from two different schools in the West Midlands area of the UK. In looking at the issues through the eyes of 16 and 17 year old girls, the study provides a unique insight into why girls are not attracted to engineering. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2014.

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