海角大神

How one engineering program used storytelling to recruit more women

The mechanical engineering department at the University of Texas at Austin has worked to expand other people's understanding of what engineers do.

|
Donnette Beckett/Herald & Review/AP
On Oct. 13, students work together on an assignment during the 'Introduce a Girl to STEM Day' at Caterpillar in Decatur, Ill. About 80 seventh-grade girls from Decatur public schools visited the facility to learn more about their potential in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, or STEM.

As millions of students of all ages have returned to school this fall, they are making important choices that have a strong influence on their eventual career path 鈥 which college majors to pursue, which high school classes to take, even which elementary school extracurricular activities to join. Many of them 鈥 especially women, girls and members of minority groups 鈥 make choices that lead them away from professions in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).

Women are just . And women earn only . More broadly, women make up 49 percent of the college-educated workforce, but nationwide.

When these disparities persist, everyone suffers. in . Furthermore, diverse design teams are more innovative and often avoid key flaws when designing products and systems with which we interact on a daily basis. worked for adult male bodies, but resulted in avoidable deaths of female and child passengers. Early voice recognition systems because they were calibrated for standard male voices.

How can we get more women into engineering fields, and help them stay for their whole careers? We need their insight and creativity to help solve the problems facing our world.

Experts tell us that there are a . For example, we need to encourage young girls to develop their spatial skills, laying the foundation for further scientific exploration as they grow.

We also need to find ways to help women feel less alone as they help us build a more inclusive engineering community. This includes hosting female-focused engineering interest groups on campuses and in workplaces, and highlighting engineering role models who reflect the true diversity of our population.

All of these things are important, but one of the simplest and most effective things we can do differently is something as simple as richer storytelling. Most people have a very limited understanding of what engineers do 鈥 and we engineers don鈥檛 do a good job of expanding that view.

In my mechanical engineering department, we have used the power of richer storytelling to strengthen our outreach and recruitment efforts, and it is working. Since 2013, we have raised the proportion of women in our undergraduate mechanical engineering program from 17 percent to more than 22 percent 鈥 nearly double the national average 鈥 representing an increase of almost 70 women in a large undergraduate program.

In a , the explains how our lives are a beautiful tapestry of overlapping stories. She warns of the danger of summarizing any one person or any one group of people in a single story.

In her case, when Westerners learn she is African, they automatically call to mind the one-dimensional story propagated in the Western media of warring African ethnic groups with children living and dying in abject poverty. That conflicts starkly with her identity as a talented writer who emerged from a . She doesn鈥檛 fit the stereotype that many people envision. Single stories, she warns, often result in crucial misunderstandings. Richer stories are needed to capture the true essence of any group of people.

But we engineers propagate a single story of ourselves all the time. Engineers solve problems using math and science. That鈥檚 our single story. But many young people, women and men alike, hear that story and can鈥檛 relate to it. They may be quite skilled in math and science, and they may enjoy solving problems, but they want to do much more than that.

They want to be creative and collaborative. They want to design systems that make people healthier and safer and preserve the environment and make the world a better place. What they don鈥檛 hear is that engineers do all of these things. Engineers design everything 鈥 absolutely everything 鈥 in our built environment. Engineers are much more than a single story.

In a highly influential publication called , the National Academy of Engineering found that most K-12 teachers and students (and their parents) have a very limited understanding of engineering and what engineers do. They tell students that the prerequisite for success is a strong aptitude for math and science, which is reinforced by engineering outreach programs that emphasize almost exclusively the importance of math and science and focus on building interest in those subjects.

Rather than focusing exclusively on that single story, the National Academy recommends focusing on how engineers make an impact on the world and the need for creativity, communication and teamwork in the engineering profession. It鈥檚 a much more multifaceted story.

In my mechanical engineering department alone, we have no shortage of rich stories to tell. Our mechanical engineers are that empower amputees to walk and run again, robots that , batteries that and new materials that could . We develop techniques to perform , and we study the intensive on limited water resources.

Simply telling the right stories is not effective, however, unless the right audiences are listening. Over the past few years, in collaboration with our , we have engaged in a focused effort to connect with the K-12 community across Texas.

Prospective engineering undergraduate students attend open houses across the state with young alumni, current students and faculty. Young alumni visit school district college days. Current students call prospective students and host them when they visit the campus. Study abroad programs are geared especially for engineering students.

In response to requests from incoming students, especially female students, we also developed a new first-year research program in which incoming students participate in engineering projects during their very first semester on campus 鈥 such as . They see firsthand how their efforts affect the lives of real people and expand our knowledge of how to create next-generation designs.

These efforts, together with richer storytelling about our profession, have contributed immensely to our diversity gains over the past few years.

An important aspect of our improved statistics is not just recruiting but retention. More than 80 first-year mechanical engineering students (more than half of whom are female) have participated in the first-year research program over the past three years. Our most recent surveys indicate that half of the inaugural class continued to participate in undergraduate research after the program ended.

Other retention efforts supported by our Women in Engineering Program include women鈥檚 groups in specific engineering departments and research projects for second-year students, as well as the first-years. More than 95 percent of incoming female mechanical engineering students in the fall of 2014 continued to study mechanical engineering in the fall of 2015, the most recent year for which data are available.

We also need to revisit our curriculum frequently to remove as many barriers to student progress as possible. For example, experts tell us that these early classes need to to continue to encourage students to stick with challenging introductory classes as they work toward broader and more compelling engineering lessons.

Engineering is not the only profession that benefits from a nuanced story. The value of a medical degree is as much about saved lives and improved health as about the organic chemistry class along the way. The value of an education degree is as much about the young lives transformed by excellent teaching as the impossibly difficult history class along the way. And the value of an engineering degree is as much about empowering a young engineer to make our engineered world a better place as the calculus class that kept her up late every night.

We need to support and encourage students to build the math, science and engineering skills they need to be successful engineers, but we also need to help them develop a broader understanding of those skills as tools for building a better engineered world. When we begin to tell multifaceted stories like these, then we find that a much larger and more diverse set of students identify themselves as engineers.

is Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering, .

on .

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to How one engineering program used storytelling to recruit more women
Read this article in
/World/Making-a-difference/Change-Agent/2016/1104/How-one-engineering-program-used-storytelling-to-recruit-more-women
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe