DocumentCode :
317665
Title :
Minority women in engineering: a performance review
Author :
Mack, Pamela Leigh
Author_Institution :
Morgan State Univ., Baltimore, MD, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
1997
fDate :
5-8 Nov 1997
Abstract :
Summary form only given as follows. In order to meet the technological challenges of the future, this country will need to utilize all of its available talent, and women are a significant resource pool. To make an impact, the enrolments of female engineers must increase considerably to ensure that we obtain the necessary graduates to join the workforce. Although there has been much discussion of and effort put into increasing the numbers, the undergraduate female engineering enrolment remains much lower than desired, at approximately nineteen percent. At Morgan, over 33% of the combined enrolment in the three disciplines offered, civil, electrical and industrial engineering, is female and the average percentage of females in our graduating classes is 32%, a group consisting of primarily African-American women. These figures far exceed the national average for women. In order to affect change, we must continue to become as knowledgeable as possible about women students and understand their patterns, particularly early in their education, in order to make major strides in the enrolment, and subsequently graduation rates of females. This paper is a step toward that process. In this paper, the performance of female engineering students in our School of Engineering is presented. Among the factors used in the study are high school, enrolment and graduation grade point averages; SAT scores; time to graduation; performance at the departure from the major; and transfer status and credits. In addition, a general sense of the participation of our women engineering students in noteworthy activities and the profession is provided
Keywords :
engineering education; gender issues; African-American women; Morgan State University; SAT scores; School of Engineering; civil engineering; electrical engineering; engineering; graduates; graduation grade point averages; industrial engineering; minority women; time to graduation; transfer credits; transfer status; undergraduate female engineering enrolment; Educational institutions; Engineering students;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Frontiers in Education Conference, 1997. 27th Annual Conference. Teaching and Learning in an Era of Change. Proceedings.
Conference_Location :
Pittsburgh, PA
ISSN :
0190-5848
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4086-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/FIE.1997.635881
Filename :
635881
Link To Document :
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