1 / 13

EdPsy581D: School Belonging

EdPsy581D: School Belonging. Cross-Sectional Study of Belonging in Engineering Education: A Work in Progress Denise Wilson (Graduate Student or Professor?) Lisa Hansen, Graduate Research Assistant Department of Electrical Engineering University of Washington. EdPsy581D: School Belonging.

Télécharger la présentation

EdPsy581D: School Belonging

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EdPsy581D: School Belonging Cross-Sectional Study of Belonging in Engineering Education: A Work in Progress Denise Wilson (Graduate Student or Professor?) Lisa Hansen, Graduate Research Assistant Department of Electrical Engineering University of Washington

  2. EdPsy581D: School Belonging • Research Objective • Previous Results • Background: Importance of Belonging • Methods • Belonging Survey • Communities • Analysis • Results • Reliability • Sense of belonging across communities • Correlation Relationships • Summary and Future Work • Acknowledgements

  3. Belonging in Engineering Education: Research Objective • To reliably evaluate sense of belonging in the University of Washington engineering community compared to comparable Research I engineering communities. • Populations • Frontiers in Education, 2005: Engineering Education Conference • IEEE Sensors, 2005: Technical Engineering Conference • NSF Engineering Research Center Retreat • EE331 (UWEE) Microelectronic Circuits Class • Communities: Immediate and Home • Example: Belonging at IEEE Sensors • At the Conference • At the Home Institution

  4. Belonging in Engineering Education:Previous Results (UWEE Introductory Class) • Students were most ambivalent about feelings of frustration • A majority of students expressed feelings of fulfillment but also felt overworked. • This contradiction reappeared in an open-ended question addressing the same issue: • Intrigued and stressed • Excited and confused • Confident and not comfortable • Curious and bored

  5. Belonging in Engineering Education:Previous Results (UWEE Introductory Class) • Major Negative Feedback: • Overwork and • Lack of relationship • Are prevalent and major barriers to fulfillment in the educational process • General Observations • Students are remarkable self-aware • “Assistance” for personal/professional growth is inaccessible due to workload • Major Positive Feedback • Inherent fulfillment in technical course content • External failure is not necessarily internalized • General Resentment • Things that don’t work • Lack of application and relationship

  6. Belonging in Engineering Education:Background (The Importance of Belonging) • What is Belonging? • The “powerful, fundamental, and extremely pervasive” motivation of humans to fulfill needs for attachment through social bonds (Baumeister & Leary, 1995). • Impact of Belonging • Elementary School: engagement, influence and positive behavior (Solomon, 1997). • Middle School: academic motivation and efforts, grade point average, absenteeism and tardiness (Goodenow, 1993)

  7. Belonging in Engineering Education:Background (The Importance of Belonging) • Impact of Belonging • High School: student academic interest and achievement, absenteeism, and misbehavior (Bryk & Driscoll, 1988). • High School: 24.2% of high school dropouts cite the lack of belonging as a significant factor in their decisions to leave school (Center for Educational Statistics, 1993). • College: feelings of being cared about and being treated in a caring way (Cheng, 2004). • College: caring relates directly to the overall quality of the institution as 1 of the 6 necessary characteristics of colleges and universities identified by Boyer (1990). • College: sense of community is moderated by level of extraversion (DeNui, 2003), which makes it harder for introverts to develop a sense of community at higher level institutions.

  8. Belonging in Engineering Education:Methods • Survey distributed to four different engineering communities: • Frontiers in Education 2005: predominantly engineering faculty • IEEE Sensors 2005: predominantly engineering graduate students • NSF Engineering Research Center Retreat: mix of engineering graduate and undergraduate students • EE331 Class at University of Washington: predominantly engineering undergraduate students. • Survey Composition (23 total items) • Validated Belonging Items (Anderson-Butcher, 2002) • “I feel part of the conference” • “I feel supported by my department” • Additional items related to autonomy, competence, belonging • “I feel technically competent” • “I feel socially at ease” • “I feel welcome to ask questions”

  9. Belonging in Engineering Education:Analysis and Results • Reliability (Cronbach a) • Dataset 1: FIE 2005 (N = 101) • Dataset 2, 5: IEEE Sensors 2005 (N = 29) • Dataset 3, 6: ERC Retreat (N = 29) • Dataset 4, 7: EE331 (N = 36)

  10. Belonging in Engineering Education:Analysis and Results • ANOVA • Dataset 1,4: EE331 • Dataset 2, 5: IEEE Sensors 2005 • Dataset 3, 6: ERC Retreat 2005 • F-test probability that belonging levels are the same across these populations = 2 X 10-7

  11. Belonging in Engineering Education:Analysis and Results • Significant Correlations: FIE 2005 • Technical Competence at Conference and Home Institution • Socially at Ease and Welcome to Ask Questions • Significant Correlations: EE331 • Accepted by Faculty/Accepted by Students • Technically Competent/Accepted by Students • Ideas are listened to/Accepted by Faculty and Students • Comfortable with faculty/Part of my Department (IEEE Sensors too) • Faculty and Students trust each other • Accepted by Faculty • Accepted by Students

  12. Belonging in Engineering Education:Summary • Summary • Engineering undergraduate students in electrical engineering at UW experience a significantly lower sense of belonging than engineering students at other institutions • Relationships (acceptance and support) by faculty are significantly related to measures of belonging (feeling part of the department) • ERC sense of belonging at home institution not significantly different from IEEE Sensors sense of belonging • Future Research • Tease out influences of graduate/undergraduate and international/United States home institutions • Evaluate impact (on belonging) of interventions designed to improve faculty/student relationship and fulfillment at UW • Investigate sources of faculty resistance to soft skill intervention

  13. Belonging in Engineering Education:Acknowledgements • Prof. Diane Jones for answering all kinds of questions with patience • Graduate Research Assistant Lisa Hansen for assisting in collecting survey data and writing the companion paper • My graduate colleagues (especially Cathy Bankston) for listening to my enthusiastic ramblings. • Funding agencies for having the future wisdom to support this effort.

More Related