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2011 - Professional Role Confidence and Gendered Persistence in Engineering

Attribution: Cech, Erin, Rubineau, Brian, Silbey, Susan, & Seron, Caroll
Researchers: Brian RubineauCaroll SeronErin CechSusan Silbey
University Affiliation: Stanford University; Cornell University
Email: ecech@stanford.edu
Research Question:
This study examines behavioral and intentional persistence among students who enter an engineering major in college.
Published: Yes
Journal Name or Institutional Affiliation: American Sociological Review
Journal Entry: Vol. 76, No. 5, Pp. 641-666
Year: 2011
Findings:

– Family plans do not contribute to women’s attrition during college but are negatively associated with men’s intentions to pursue an engineering career. Additionally, math self-assessment does not predict behavioral or intentional persistence once students enroll in a STEM major.
– The authors find that professional role confidence predicts behavioral and intentional persistence, and that women’s relative lack of this confidence contributes to their attrition.
– The authors find no difference in levels of expertise and career-fit confidence by race and ethnicity for either men or women. Expertise confidence, however, may be particularly important for Hispanic students’ intentional persistence, and career-fit confidence may be important for Asian students’ behavioral persistence.
– Math self-assessment is significantly and positively related to whether students enter college as engineering majors. However, once students matriculate into a math-intensive major, profession-specific assessments, such as expertise and career-fit confidence, seem to replace math self-assessment as predictors of persistence.
– When men switch out of engineering, however, they are more likely than women to switch to non-STEM majors.
– Men report higher levels of intentional persistence; that is, they are more likely than women to intend to be an engineer in five years.
– Men in their sample rate their math skills significantly more positively than women rate their own math skills. However, women and men do not earn significantly different grade point averages in college; their SAT math and verbal scores at the end of high school, although well above average, are also statistically similar.
– Men in their sample have significantly more expertise confidence and career-fit confidence than do women. If these measures of self-assessment and confidence are significantly related to persistence, then these differentials could explain gendered persistence.

* Gender differences in persistence in Engineering.

Scholarship Types: Journal Article Reporting Empirical ResearchKeywords: CareerCollegeEngineeringGenderPersistenceSelf-ConfidenceRegions: NEMethodologies: QuantitativeResearch Designs: SurveyAnalysis Methods: Multinomial Logistic RegressionOrdered Logit Sampling Frame:Freshmen Engineering Students
Sampling Types: Non-random - opportunityAnalysis Units: StudentData Types: Quantitative-Panel Data
Data Description:

The authors use original panel data of engineering students from four schools at two time periods: Year 1 (freshman year) and Year 4 (senior year). Their sample consists of 288 students who entered engineering programs in 2003. The authors collected data through online surveys sent to students via e-mail. Although the full sample includes students from many different majors, their analysis includes only students enrolled in “or intending to enroll in” an engineering major.

The DVs: Behavioral persistence (i.e., students’ completion of an engineering major, Year 1 to Year 4) and intentional persistence (i.e., students’ Year 4 belief that they will be an engineer in five years). Behavioral persistence is a variable with three values corresponding to three theoretically important possible outcomes: (1) respondents remained in an engineering major, (2) respondents left engineering for another STEM major, or (3) respondents left engineering for a non-STEM major. Intentional persistence asks students to describe the likelihood they will “be an engineer in five years” (1 = very unlikely to 4 = very likely).

To measure family plans, the authors average the centered responses to the following two questions asked in Year 1: “importance to me: building a family” and “importance to me: building a satisfying, long-term intimate relationship” to create an importance of family plans variable. They measure math self-assessment with a Year 1 variable asking respondents to rate their math ability compared to an average person their age.

Professional role confidence is defined as individuals’ confidence in their ability to successfully fulfill the roles, competencies, and identity features of a profession. They capture professional role confidence with measures that ask about students’ confidence as a result of their initial exposure to engineering (i.e., during the spring semester of their first year in college).

The career-fit confidence measure combines Likert-scale responses where students were asked to rate their confidence on the following four indicators as a result of their engineering courses: “engineering is the right profession for me,” “selecting the right field of engineering for me,” “finding a satisfying job,” and “my commitment to engineering, compared to my engineering classmates.”

To measure potential institutional and environmental differences at each school, they include dummy variables for each institution. From supplemental analyses using interaction terms between gender and school, they found that none of the school influences on persistence were gendered.

They also control for race and parents education.

Theoretical Framework:
Relevance:STEM Persistence and Retention
Archives: K-16 STEM Abstracts
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