Abstract

The motivation for this exploratory qualitative study is to understand what a culture of belonging may look like across six engineering education making spaces in institutions of higher education in the U.S. The research question for this study was: In what ways are the management, instructors, and staff operating engineering education making spaces influencing a culture of belonging (if any) for engineering students? We examined the transcripts of semi-structured interviews of 49 faculty members and 29 members of management/staff of making spaces, using thematic coding. From the data, we identified four themes that described the culture of belonging being created in these six engineering making spaces: (a) a ‘closed loop’ culture for inclusion, diversity, equity, and access; (b) a ‘transactional, dichotomous’ culture; (c) a ‘band-aid, masquerading’ culture; (d) a potential ‘boundary-crossing’ culture. Our primary conclusion was that created cultures in engineering making spaces are extensions of normative cultures found in traditional engineering classrooms. Additionally, while making spaces were attempting to change this culture in their physical infrastructures, it was deemed that the space leadership needs to expand hiring strategies, the nature of making activities, the ambient/physical appearance of the space, disciplines, and required expertise, to create a truly inclusive and equitable culture of belonging.

Highlights

  • This year, you know I have 40 employees: half are women and half are men.And in the machine shop it’s about the same percentage as far as support goes.So, we try to make it a very inviting and warm feeling

  • We identified four themes aligned with a culture of belonging being created in these six engineering making spaces: (A) a ‘closed loop’ culture for inclusion, diversity, equity, and access; (B) a ‘transactional, dichotomous’ culture; (C) a ‘band-aid, masquerading’

  • We explored the efforts to create a culture of belonging in engineering education spaces for making at six different sites

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Summary

Introduction

This year, you know I have 40 employees: half are women and half are men.And in the machine shop it’s about the same percentage as far as support goes.So, we try to make it a very inviting and warm feeling. This year, you know I have 40 employees: half are women and half are men. In the machine shop it’s about the same percentage as far as support goes. We try to make it a very inviting and warm feeling. We asked quite a few females on our staff, you know, what color you like and so it was, alright, we are going with this. Awesome, so they had some input on that, so that yeah that makes a difference. To feel some ownership and to feel like they are a part of this space. Any barriers we can break down here . Any barriers we can break down here . . . (Director, Lead)

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