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Gender and Self-Efficacy in Engineering: Embracing Failure and a Growth Mindset for Female High School Students (Fundamental)
Author(s) -
J. Jill Rogers,
Rebecca Primeau,
Noel Hennessey,
James C. Baygents
Publication year - 2016
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/p.27006
Subject(s) - mindset , appeal , curriculum , medical education , engineering education , engineering , psychology , engineering management , medicine , pedagogy , computer science , political science , law , artificial intelligence
Over the last decade much attention has been drawn to the lack of women in engineering careers and the need to attract and retain them in the field. This paper will discuss prior research focused on female student self-efficacy in engineering and the subsequent treatments that have been applied at various stages in the STEM pipeline. Then we will examine the ENGR 102 HS program and results from four years of student course evaluation surveys (n=1093). ENGR 102 High School (HS) is an introduction to engineering course offered in 34 high schools in the Southwest. Students who enroll in the University of Arizona course receive three units of credit from the College of Engineering (COE) towards an engineering degree. Now in its eighth year of operation, the ENGR 102 HS program reaches diverse student populations around the state. ENGR 102 HS looks to fill the pipeline to undergraduate engineering degrees with diverse, capable, informed students of both genders. While gender parity is not our primary objective, we strive to create opportunity, diminish barriers and to deliver a curriculum with a broad appeal. Data analysis for this paper concentrates on selected questions from the ENGR 102 HS course evaluations. Our results examine female (n=220) and male (n=873) high school student responses. Specifically, we explored the landscape of female ENGR 102 HS high school student self-efficacy in engineering to include attitudes towards failure, and mindset. Results demonstrated that female ENGR 102 HS students possessed a significantly lower engineering self-efficacy than male students. With respect to mindset and fear of failure, male and female students showed no statically significant difference.

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