Abstract

Educational institutions have historically struggled with retaining women in engineering. A significant drop occurs in the first year of undergraduate studies. In response, some universities have modified firstyear curricula to include more teamwork and collaboration. Using epistemic frame theory, we hypothesize that more women would remain in the field if they had authentic experiences of the engineering profession early in their undergraduate career. To test this hypothesis, we designed and implemented an epistemic game, Nephrotex in which students engage in authentic engineering design in teams. We collected two sources of data from students in Nephrotex (experimental condition): (1) students’ preand post-survey responses about attitudes toward engineering and (2) students’ online discourse. We collected preand post-surveys from the comparison group (control condition), students who participated in a non-designbased introductory engineering course in which they researched global engineering problems and solutions in teams. We conducted a principal components analysis on the survey data and an epistemic network analysis on the discourse data. Our controlled study suggests that (1) women in the experimental condition had a greater increase in confidence in and commitment to engineering than women in the control condition, and (2) students in the experimental condition who focused mostly on engineering design instead of collaboration were more committed to engineering. While the sample sizes are not large for this experiment and the gender distribution is not equal between groups (experimental, 63 female 75 male; control, 35 female 95 male), our results suggest that an authentic engineering simulation can increase women’s motivation to persist in engineering. Interestingly, this was not the finding for men. Of the male and female students who participated in Nephrotex, those who focused on engineering design talk in collaborative discussions reported that they were more committed and confident afterward, suggesting that design is a motivating element in authentic engineering simulations for both men and women.

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