Exploring Engineering Students’ Perceptions of Diversity and Inclusion in a Southern Public University: A Case Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Textbook Evaluation
2.1.1. Samples
2.1.2. Sample Analysis
2.2. In-Person Interviews
2.2.1. Participants
2.2.2. Materials and Procedures
2.2.3. Analytical Process
2.3. Student Surveys
2.3.1. Participants
2.3.2. Materials and Procedures
2.3.3. Analytical Process
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Civil Engineering Textbook Evaluation Results
3.2. Students’ Perception Survey Results
3.2.1. Demographic Information of Participant
3.2.2. Engineering Student Perceptions of Diversity
- General Perception about College and University
- Diversity in Textbooks and Curriculum
3.2.3. Student Organization and Involvement
3.2.4. Diversity in Engineering Workplace
3.3. Students’ Interview Results
3.3.1. Interest Driven Engineering Pursuit
3.3.2. Why Diversity and Inclusion Are Important for Engineering?
3.3.3. Suggestions for Improving Diversity and Inclusion in Engineering
4. Conclusions
4.1. Textbook
4.2. Students’ Perceptions of Diversity
4.2.1. General Perception
4.2.2. Diversity in Textbooks and Curriculum
4.3. Students Organization
4.4. Workforce
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Items | Girl/Woman | Boy/Man | Non-Binary | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|
Middle Eastern | ||||
Asian/Pacific Islander | ||||
Black/African | ||||
Latinx | ||||
Native American | ||||
White/Caucasian | ||||
Racially Ambiguous | ||||
Multiracial | ||||
People with Disabilities | ||||
Animals | ||||
Total |
Statements | Very Satisfied (+2) | Satisfied (+1) | Unclear(−1) | Not Satisfied (−2) | |
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Diversity of Characters | 1. The textbook features visually diverse characters, and the characters of color do not all look alike. | ||||
2. There are references to different ethnic and cultural traditions, languages, religions, names, and clothing. | |||||
3. Diverse ethnicities and nationalities are portrayed—not all Asian families are Chinese, not all Latinx families are Mexican, etc. | |||||
4. Diverse family structures (i.e., single parents, adopted or foster children, same-sex parents, other relatives living with the family, etc.) are represented. | |||||
5. Characters with disabilities are represented. | |||||
6. Characters of color are main characters and not just sidekicks. | |||||
7. If there is conflict in the storyline, the characters of color are not mostly considered the problem. | |||||
Accurate Portrayals | 8. Characters of color are not assumed to have low family wealth, low educational attainment, and/or low income. | ||||
9. Gender is not central to the storyline. Female characters are in a variety of roles that could also be filled by a male character. | |||||
10. Social situations and problems are not seen as individual problems but are situated within a societal context. | |||||
11. Characters of diverse cultural backgrounds are not represented stereotypically or presented as foreign or exotic. | |||||
12. Problems faced by people of color or females are not resolved through the benevolent intervention of a white person or male. | |||||
13. Diverse characters are rooted in their own cultures and are not ambiguous | |||||
Total | |||||
Total Representation Score |
Statements | Very Satisfied (+2) | Satisfied (+1) | Unclear (−1) | Not Satisfie d (−2) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Decolonization/ Power and Privilege | 1. Textbook highlights non-dominant populations and their strengths and assets, so that students of diverse race, class, gender, ability, and sexual orientation can relate and participate fully. | ||||
2. Textbook communicates an asset-based perspective by representing people of diverse races, classes, genders, abilities, and sexual orientations through their strengths, talents, and knowledge rather than their perceived flaws or deficiencies. | |||||
3. Textbook does not communicate negativity or hostility toward people of marginalized backgrounds through verbal or nonverbal insults, slights, or snubs. | |||||
4. Textbook and instructional activities promote or provoke critical questions about the societal status quo. They present alternative points of view as equally worth considering. | |||||
5. Textbook recognizes the validity and integrity of knowledge systems based in communities of color, collectivist cultures, matriarchal societies, and non-Christian religions. | |||||
Centering Multiple Perspectives | 6. Textbook recognizes the validity and integrity of knowledge systems based in communities of color, collectivist cultures, matriarchal societies, and non-Christian religions. | ||||
7. Textbook presents different points of view on the same event or experience, especially points of view from marginalized people and communities. | |||||
Connect Learning to Real Life & Action | 8. Textbook provides avenues for students to connect learning to social, political, or environmental concerns that affect them and their lives and contribute to change. | ||||
9. Textbook encourages students to take actions that combat inequity or promote equity within the school or local community. | |||||
Total | |||||
Total Representation Score |
Questions | Options |
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| (A) Strongly Agree; (B) Agree; (C) Neutral; (D) Disagree; (E) Strongly Disagree |
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| (A) Strongly Agree; (B) Agree; (C) Neutral; (D) Disagree; (E) Strongly Disagree |
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| Choose from 1 (lowest score) to 10 (highest score). |
| (A) Yes; (B) No; (C) Maybe |
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| Open answers. |
Questions | Options |
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| (A) Yes. (B) No. |
| Open answers. |
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| (A) Very good; (B) Good; (C) Neutral; (D) Not Good; (E) Poor |
| (A) Very good; (B) Good; (C) Neutral; (D) Not Good; (E) Poor |
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Questions | Options |
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| (A) Yes. (B) No. |
| (A) Less than 50 people; (B) 50 to 100 people; (C) More than 100 people; (D) Not sure. |
| (A) Local or regional; (B) Family-owned; (C) Domestic; (D) International; (E) Profit; (F) Non-profit |
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S/N | Mann–Whitney U Test | Ethnicity | Gender | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Test Statistic (U) | p-Value | Test Statistic (U) | p-Value | ||
1 | How do you agree or disagree with the statement “I feel a sense of belonging to the College of Engineering at the University of South Alabama”? | 368.0 | 0.0 | 503.5 | 0.458 |
2 | As an engineering student, when you hear about “diversity in engineering”, what is your feeling? | 816.0 | 0.890 | 677.5 | 0.052 |
3 | How do you agree with the statement “Diversity can provide benefits to engineering”? | 432.0 | 0.815 | 608.5 | 0.548 |
4 | After reading the definition and according to your own experience, how important do you think diversity in engineering is? | 706.5 | 0.110 | 765.5 | 0.005 |
5 | If you were to give a score about your overall impression about the status of diversity in the University of South Alabama, which score would you give? | 391.0 | 0.015 | 641.5 | 0.310 |
6 | The University of South Alabama has the office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. How much do you know about its function and role? | 625.0 | 0.654 | 497.5 | 0.428 |
7 | How do you feel about the relevancy of the following description to “diversity in engineering”? (Engineers are a diverse group of people regardless of gender, age, ethnicity, religion, backgrounds, etc.) | 652.5 | 0.413 | 597.5 | 0.637 |
8 | How do you feel about the relevancy of the following description to “diversity in engineering”? (Engineers get along well with colleagues.) | 559.5 | 0.712 | 554.5 | 0.935 |
9 | How do you feel about the relevancy of the following description to “diversity in engineering”? (Engineers work with various clients.) | 573.0 | 0.837 | 578.5 | 0.805 |
10 | How do you feel about the relevancy of the following description to “diversity in engineering”? (Engineers provide solutions that satisfy the constraints of cost, performance, environment and society.) | 596.0 | 0.915 | 648.0 | 0.208 |
11 | How do you feel about the relevancy of the following description to “diversity in engineering”? (Engineers have equal opportunities to get promoted and receive salary increases.) | 518.5 | 0.368 | 489.0 | 0.339 |
12 | How do you feel about the relevancy of the following description to “diversity in engineering”? (Engineers join organizations such as the Society of Women Engineers and the National Society of Black Engineers.) | 324.0 | 0.076 | 698.0 | 0.074 |
13 | Have you recognized any engineering courses that have components of diversity? Examples of components: have a diversity statement in syllabus, learning objective that includes diversity, instructor talks about diversity directly or indirectly. | 364.5 | 0.004 | 490.0 | 0.362 |
14 | You have taken many engineering courses. Generally speaking, how much are components of diversity a part of engineering textbooks used in your courses? | 462.0 | 0.109 | 636.0 | 0.330 |
15 | How do you view the importance of the following practices that can promote diversity in an engineering course? (There is a clear statement about diversity and inclusion in the syllabus.) | 768.5 | 0.029 | 728.0 | 0.039 |
16 | How do you view the importance of the following practices that can promote diversity in an engineering course? (The textbook contains more diverse examples (e.g., using an example of an engineer who is part of an underrepresented group).) | 834.0 | 0.003 | 765.5 | 0.011 |
17 | How do you view the importance of the following practices that can promote diversity in an engineering course? (Instructors remember your name, personally connect with you, and get to know you well.) | 680.0 | 0.186 | 561.0 | 1.000 |
18 | How do you view the importance of the following practices that can promote diversity in an engineering course? (Instructors care about everyone’s learning experience and academic performance.) | 601.5 | 0.836 | 600.0 | 0.530 |
19 | How do you view the importance of the following practices that can promote diversity in an engineering course? (Instructors have a clear and transparent grading policy for everyone.) | 555.5 | 0.572 | 591.5 | 0.588 |
20 | How do you view the importance of the following practices that can promote diversity in an engineering course? (Instructors use some examples related to diversity and inclusion to help students learn technical content.) | 683.5 | 0.245 | 743.5 | 0.023 |
21 | How do you view the importance of the following practices that can promote diversity in an engineering course? (Instructors design an assignment related to diversity and inclusion.) | 771.5 | 0.027 | 802.0 | 0.003 |
22 | How do you view the importance of the following practices that can promote diversity in an engineering course? (Instructors embrace diversity and invite guest technical speakers who have diverse backgrounds.) | 772.0 | 0.020 | 785.5 | 0.004 |
23 | How do you view the importance of the following practices that can promote diversity in an engineering course? [(nstructors lead field trips that can broaden students’ horizons in not only technical knowledge but also diversity and inclusion.) | 812.5 | 0.005 | 708.5 | 0.060 |
24 | How do you view the importance of the following practices that can promote diversity in an engineering course? (Instructors inspire all students to engage in active learning.) | 531.5 | 0.373 | 603.0 | 0.499 |
25 | Have you ever been discriminated against or encountered an uncomfortable learning environment as an engineering student because of your race, gender, or any other reason? | 787.0 | 0.007 | 806.5 | 0.001 |
26 | If you encountered an uncomfortable learning environment because of your race, gender, or for other reasons that are not fair to you, what would you do? (Check all that apply) | 3396.0 | 0.829 | 3396.0 | 0.829 |
27 | How do you feel about the representation of people of color in your student organization? | 214.0 | 0.018 | 288.5 | 0.515 |
28 | How do you feel about the representation of women in your advised student organization? | 232.5 | 0.021 | 279.5 | 0.330 |
29 | In your student organization, club, or society, do you have a clear policy or statement that promotes diversity? | 281.5 | 0.538 | 313.5 | 0.360 |
30 | How do you feel about the diversity activities that the University of South Alabama has conducted? | 433.0 | 0.053 | 497.5 | 0.418 |
31 | What activities would you recommend to promote diversity in engineering? (Increasing the number of members who represent minorities in the engineering student organizations.) | 732.0 | 0.076 | 811.0 | 0.002 |
32 | What activities would you recommend to promote diversity in engineering? (Increasing the number of engineering scholarships designated for minorities.) | 831.0 | 0.010 | 841.5 | 0.002 |
33 | What activities would you recommend to promote diversity in engineering? (Having a designated funding resource for minority engineering students which can be applied to enhance learning and professional development.) | 801.5 | 0.010 | 786.0 | 0.005 |
34 | What activities would you recommend to promote diversity in engineering? (1 vs. 1 friend program that enhances interaction between engineering students.) | 740.5 | 0.081 | 734.5 | 0.039 |
35 | If you have worked for an engineering company, what is your impression about the company’s diversity in the workplace? | 114.0 | 0.237 | 100.0 | 0.852 |
36 | Have you ever been discriminated against or encountered an uncomfortable working environment because of your race, gender, or any other reason? | 350.5 | 0.010 | 356.0 | 0.003 |
37 | Do you believe that some groups of people have fewer opportunities to succeed in engineering careers? | 1299.0 | 0.001 | 763.0 | 0.007 |
38 | How much do you agree with the following statements? (Diversity, equity, and inclusion are necessary to build a stronger, more unified profession.) | 739.5 | 0.050 | 734.5 | 0.021 |
39 | How much do you agree with the following statements? (If I seek employment, I prefer to work for a company that has a clear policy of diversity, equity, and inclusion.) | 760.0 | 0.033 | 747.0 | 0.019 |
40 | How much do you agree with the following statements? (It is not my responsibility to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion.) | 644.5 | 0.491 | 497.5 | 0.427 |
41 | How much do you agree with the following statements? (If the company I work for emphasizes diversity, equity, and inclusion, I feel I would be more fairly treated regardless of who I am.) | 749.0 | 0.046 | 768.0 | 0.009 |
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Textbook Number | Diversity of Characters Tally | Diversity of Authors Tally | Representation | Social Justice | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 81 | 2 | −8 | 0 | −8 |
2 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 0 | 5 |
3 | 0 | 5 | 2 | −4 | −2 |
Average | 28.3 | 3.7 | −0.3 | −1.3 | −1.7 |
Representation Category | Culturally Destructive (−26 to −11); Culturally Insufficient (−10 to 0); Emerging Awareness (1 to 11); Culturally Aware (12 to 19); Culturally Responsive (20 to 26) | ||||
Social Justice Category | Culturally Destructive (−16 to −7); Culturally Insufficient (−6 to 0); Emerging Awareness (1 to 7); Culturally Aware (8 to 12); Culturally Responsive (13 to 16) |
Item | Variables | No. | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|
Major | Electrical Engineering | 2 | 2.7% |
Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering | 3 | 4.1% | |
Mechanical Engineering | 27 | 37.0% | |
Civil, Coastal and Environmental Engineering | 41 | 56.2% | |
Gender | Male | 51 | 69.9% |
Female | 22 | 30.1% | |
Age | 20–24 | 50 | 69.4% |
25–29 | 13 | 18.1% | |
30–34 | 6 | 8.3% | |
>40 | 3 | 4.2% | |
Ethnicity | Caucasian | 49 | 67.1% |
African-American | 7 | 9.6% | |
Latino or Hispanic | 2 | 2.7% | |
Asian | 5 | 6.8% | |
Native American | 1 | 1.4% | |
Two or More | 8 | 11.0% | |
Other/Unknown | 1 | 1.4% | |
Marriage Status | Single | 63 | 40.6% |
Married | 91 | 58.7% | |
Prefer not to say | 1 | 0.6% | |
School Level | Freshman | 6 | 8.2% |
Sophomore | 11 | 15.1% | |
Junior | 30 | 41.1% | |
Senior | 21 | 28.8% | |
Graduate Student | 5 | 6.8% | |
Political View | Very liberal | 8 | 11.0% |
Slightly liberal | 15 | 20.5% | |
Slightly conservative | 22 | 30.1% | |
Very conservative | 13 | 17.8% | |
Prefer not to say | 15 | 20.5% |
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Share and Cite
Wu, S.; Burleson, A.; Islam, S.; Gossen, D.; Oyelere, A. Exploring Engineering Students’ Perceptions of Diversity and Inclusion in a Southern Public University: A Case Study. Trends High. Educ. 2024, 3, 67-104. https://doi.org/10.3390/higheredu3010005
Wu S, Burleson A, Islam S, Gossen D, Oyelere A. Exploring Engineering Students’ Perceptions of Diversity and Inclusion in a Southern Public University: A Case Study. Trends in Higher Education. 2024; 3(1):67-104. https://doi.org/10.3390/higheredu3010005
Chicago/Turabian StyleWu, Shenghua, Andrew Burleson, Samantha Islam, Drew Gossen, and Abeeb Oyelere. 2024. "Exploring Engineering Students’ Perceptions of Diversity and Inclusion in a Southern Public University: A Case Study" Trends in Higher Education 3, no. 1: 67-104. https://doi.org/10.3390/higheredu3010005
APA StyleWu, S., Burleson, A., Islam, S., Gossen, D., & Oyelere, A. (2024). Exploring Engineering Students’ Perceptions of Diversity and Inclusion in a Southern Public University: A Case Study. Trends in Higher Education, 3(1), 67-104. https://doi.org/10.3390/higheredu3010005