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The Gendered Effect of Cooperative Education, Contextual Support, and Self‐Efficacy on Undergraduate Retention
Author(s) -
Raelin Joseph A.,
Bailey Margaret B.,
Hamann Jerry,
Pendleton Leslie K.,
Reisberg Rachelle,
Whitman David L.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of engineering education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.896
H-Index - 108
eISSN - 2168-9830
pISSN - 1069-4730
DOI - 10.1002/jee.20060
Subject(s) - psychology , self efficacy , longitudinal study , retention rate , knowledge retention , longitudinal data , engineering education , academic achievement , mathematics education , work (physics) , medical education , social psychology , engineering , medicine , sociology , demography , computer science , mechanical engineering , computer security , pathology
Background Longstanding data have established that women earn about 20% of undergraduate degrees in engineering; they also have lower academic self‐efficacy in the science, technology, engineering, and math fields than do men. This study examines these findings through a longitudinal design that explores whether cooperative education (co‐op) can improve the retention of women (and men) in their undergraduate studies. Purpose This study examines the effect on retention of demographic characteristics, cooperative education, contextual support, and three dimensions of self‐efficacy – work, career, and academic – and their change over time. It incorporates longitudinal measures and a data check at the end of the students' fifth year. Design/Method Respondents filled out 20‐minute surveys, approximately one year apart, during three separate time periods. The study introduced and validated a number of new scales. The data for each time period were submitted to successive analyses. Results The findings verified the study's pathways model. Academic achievement and academic self‐efficacy, as well as contextual support in the case for women, in all time periods were critical to retention. Work self‐efficacy, developed by students between their second and fourth years, was also an important factor in retention, although it was strongly tied to the students' participation in co‐op programs. Higher retention was associated with an increased number of co‐ops completed by students. Conclusion Relationships between work self‐efficacy and co‐op participation and between academic self‐efficacy and academic achievement play a critical role in retention for both male and female students.

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