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Women aren’t becoming engineers because of confidence issues: U.S. study

Written by  PEM Staff Friday, 28 October 2011
Women are less likely than men to stay in engineering majors and to become engineers because they want to have families and are more insecure about their math abilities, right? Not necessarily, suggests a new study in the October issue of the American Sociological Review.

The study found that the real issue for female engineering students is their lack of “professional role confidence.” Among other things, this term encompasses people’s faith in their ability to go out into the world and be professional engineers and their belief that engineering fits their interests and values, which the study authors refer to as “expertise confidence” and “career-fit confidence,” respectively.

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“Women engineering students go to the same classes, take the same tests, and get the same GPAs as men, sometimes even higher,” said the study’s lead author Erin Cech, a Postdoctoral Fellow at Stanford University’s Clayman Institute for Gender Research. “But, what we found is that the women in our study developed less confidence in their engineering expertise than men did and they also developed less confidence that engineering is the career that fits them best, even though they went through the same preparation process as men.”

As result of these confidence issues, women who begin college as engineering majors are less likely than men to remain engineering majors and less likely than men to believe that they will be professional engineers in the future, Cech said.

So, why do women engineering students develop significantly less confidence than men?

“It stems from very subtle differences in the way that men and women are treated in engineering programs and from cultural ideologies about what it means to be a competent engineer,” Cech said. “Often, competence in engineering is associated in people’s minds with men and masculinity more than it is with women and femininity. So, there are these micro-biases that happen, and when they add up, they result in women being less confident in their expertise and their career fit.”

The study considers 288 students who entered engineering programs in 2003 at four institutions of higher education: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering, and Smith College. As part of the study, the students were surveyed in 2003 and again in 2007.

“While our sample is small, we found no evidence that women’s desire to have families leads them to leave engineering majors or impacts whether they believe they will be professional engineers in the future,” Cech said. “In addition, for both men and women, there was no evidence that negative math self-assessment predicts persistence in engineering majors or impacts whether they believe they will be professional engineers.”

Interestingly, the study found that the desire to have a family is negatively associated with whether men believe that they will be professional engineers in the future.

“What we think is going on is that men who have strong traditional family plans may have some expectation of being the bread winner for their family and, therefore, they seek jobs outside of engineering that are actually better paid,” Cech said. “So, they go onto law school or into finance or something like that.”

As for what can be done to improve women’s confidence and increase the likelihood that they will persist in engineering majors and go onto engineering careers, Cech offered several recommendations.

“I think the most direct way that engineering programs can address this issue of women giving up on engineering is by doing a better job of bringing practicing engineers into the classroom,” said Cech, who suggested that some of these engineers could be part of panels put on by women in engineering organizations.

Practicing engineers who are brought into classrooms should address the issue of confidence head on, Cech said. “It would be good for them to talk about their confidence in their expertise and their confidence that engineering is the right fit for them,” she said. “If these things can be brought to the forefront and explicitly talked about, it may help women and men engineering students develop confidence of their own.”

Cech also recommended that engineering programs offer more directed internship opportunities that place students with working engineers on real-world engineering projects. “This experience would integrate explicit learning objectives related to advancement in an engineering career with a broad range of skills required for success as an engineer,” Cech said.

“This type of practical real life experience, designed in part by educators familiar with gender biases in the profession, could help broaden students’ often narrow conceptions of the role of engineers to include skills that they might not realize are important such as communication and teamwork. These internships could also increase students’ awareness about the wide variety of engineering careers available to them, allowing more students to find their fit within the profession.”

Cech’s study coauthors include: Brian Rubineau, an Assistant Professor of Organizational Behavior at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations; Susan Silbey, the Leon and Anne Goldberg Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and Carroll Seron, a Professor in the Department of Criminology, Law, and Society at the University of California-Irvine.

Their study is part of a larger project, “Future Paths: Developing Diverse Leadership for Engineering,” funded by the National Science Foundation.
www.asanet.org
Last modified on Monday, 31 October 2011 13:19

comments  

 
+1 #6 Peter Shum 2011-11-22 18:55
What I don't get is why is there such an obsession about how many women work in engineering? Why do people want to "social engineer" things? By the same token, why are there no similar laments and/or rants about how few men work in fields such as nursing, baby-sitting, clerical, etc.? Also why do those people who carry this obsession also "worry" about why there are so few female "trench-diggers" or "highway sweepers"?

People take up whatever profession or work that they want, or are interested in. Let's leave them and nature alone!!!
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0 #5 john Siska 2011-11-09 03:39
With all due respect of Ms. L. Engineer's work experiences, the statistics speak beyond any one individuals limited career exposures in this matter. Beginning with the Society of Woman Engineers of U.S.A. claiming 12 % of engineers in the U.S. to be women. Other National researched statistics of woman engineers: Canada 21 % ; China 39% ; Rusia 58 % ; South Korea 46 % ; Japan 66 %. Once again I ask "Where is your equality North America !?" John.
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+1 #4 Lady Engineer 2011-11-07 15:48
To John Siska: Having 15 yrs experience I have dealt with all the cultures you have listed, and I totally disagree. I went to a US University at a college with mostly Middle Eastern professors, and only a couple were fair minded toward women. One actually told me women were not worth teaching. However, I was an older (mid 20’s), confident student, so I was not afraid to speak up and put them in their place.
During my working years, my experience has been about the same: when dealing with other cultures, my expertise is often called into question, but since they are customers, I of course have to be diplomatic with my responses. In contrast, my direct colleagues here in the US treat me as a complete equal. So my question to you, John, since you obviously can’t have any direct experience, on whose experiences are you basing your perceptions?
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+2 #3 john Siska 2011-11-06 12:35
This is almost completely a cultural issue. It is a bias most prevelant in North America. In Europe, Asia, Isreal, India, China, and a few middle eastern countries; women are equally regarded and accepted for their capabilities as engineers, and participate without preference with their male conterparts. Where's the freedom and opportunity USA?
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-1 #2 Glenn Black 2011-11-01 11:05
A psychological study was done of optimists, realists, and pessimists, as to who saw the world most clearly. They surveyed & tested the people, and found that those who were clinically depressed were the most accurate at predicting the future outcome of events that were beyond their personal control and influence.

Are women engineers more realistic in their assessments, take life as it really is, and choose their personal path accordingly?
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-1 #1 Glenn Black 2011-11-01 11:04
When I graduated from 4 yrs of engineering at university in 1977, I was quite sure I was well trained by my classes and my summer jobs (always with an engineering theme) and was ready to take on the world with all the answers to all the world's opportunities and problems. As I matured further, I realized just how complex the real world was and how little I knew. Today, 34 years later, with an additional 34 years of hard-won experience, I'm even more convinced at how little I still know.

Do women skip those years of bravado, and realize their limitations and reality sooner?
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